AI could be the most trending topic of the
decade.
It is everywhere we turn and advancing at
unprecedented speeds.
This has caused the subject to be debated,
discussed and analysed at great lengths and
– as this video is evidence – will likely
continue to be, at least until it is prohibited
by our robot overlords.
Of course, I’m only – well – half joking.
There are fears that AI has the potential
to be a civilization-ending entity, where
fictional household names such as The Terminator
or I, Robot inch closer to reality…
However, as with every theory, there is always
an opposing one.
Many suggest that AI will, in fact, bring
on the beginning of a utopian era: an era
where leisure time is in abundance and suffering
is at a minimum.
It is even conceptualised that humans may
one day augment themselves with AI, creating
a powerful bond between organic and synthetic
life.
This may sound far-fetched, but we can see
our species making leaps and bounds as we
speak.
So, how advanced is Artificial Intelligence
in the 21st century?
Well, self-driving cars are set to change
the world in a massive way.
Every automobile company is investing billions
into the technology, and if they don’t,
they will get left behind.
Start-ups are creating data management systems,
radars, cameras, and other cool tech that
can be offered to the highest bidder.
And Google, of course, has its own self driving
car project, Waymo, which will most likely
be sold to car companies, much like what they
do with their android operating system for
mobile phone manufacturers.
So, if Waymo is the Android of self-driving
cars, then Tesla is most closely comparable
to Apple.
Tesla have developed all their own software
and hardware and are currently leading the
pack in the electric vehicle and autonomous
driving industry.
But more on Tesla and Musk in a second.
And… what else?
Well, only a few years ago, it was predicted
that it would take a decade or more before
AI could beat top players at the millennia-old
game, ‘Go’.
But in 2016 ‘Alpha Go’ made headlines
by beating Lee Sedol, ranked 2nd in the world.
From there, it went from beating the top ‘Go’
player, to being able to beat 50 top players
simultaneously.
What’s more, just over a year later the
completely self-taught AI ‘Alpha Go Zero’
was able to defeat ‘Alpha Go’ with little
difficulty.
The creators of this AI say that this was
an important advancement towards building
artificial general intelligence systems, or
AGIs.
An AGI is an AI with intelligence closer to
a human’s lateral thinking, rather than
an AI that is built for specific tasks, like
playing games with defined and finite rules,
such as chess.
Wow, we could be looking at the golden age
of AI.
But that’s just our opinion.
What do the experts think the future will
bring?
Twenty-seventeen saw two of the biggest tech
titans in the world fundamentally disagree
on the future of AI.
Elon Musk, the visionary CEO of Tesla, Space
X, Neuralink, and, until recently, Open AI,
and Mark Zuckerberg, creator and CEO of the
social media juggernaut Facebook.
Musk sits on the more pessimistic side of
the AI fence with a general message that we
should be absolutely terrified of AI.
This may sound strange seeing as Mr Musk is
a pioneer in AI advancement.
However, just as Frankenstein grew to despise
his creation, Musk may be seeing the potential
flaws in playing god too.
Musk and his cross-industry teams have pushed
AI into the realms of sci-fi-like territory.
As we mentioned, self-driving cars are set
to shake up the automobile industry in ways
unseen since we said goodbye to the horse
and carriage, and Tesla is at the forefront
of this technology.
And while Tesla’s cars are not yet capable,
or better, allowed of fully autonomous, driver-less
transport, they are equipped with the hardware
that will eventually allow them to drive without
any human input.
You won’t even have to tell your car where
to go most of the time as the it will gradually
learn your schedule.
Musk has even boasted that autonomous cars
will be the safest mode of transport ever,
having the ability to ‘see’ and ‘hear’
in all directions, which is way beyond the
regular human capability.
Well, self-driving airplanes will probably
disagree 😊
Something else worth mentioning is that in
July 2018, Elon Musk launched the Falcon 9
rocket for the second time as it had previously
used AI to land itself back on Earth.
Working so closely with AI and making countless
technological break-throughs makes Elon’s
stark warning about the ominous nature of
AI all the more concerning.
He acknowledges this himself.
Musk has also warned his fellow AI pioneers
that, unless steps are taken to control the
speed at which AI is being developed, along
with putting regulations in place when developing
thinking machines, dangerous things can happen.
In fact, we can go as far as in our speculation
as saying that artificially intelligent robots
will inevitably become our malevolent rulers
at best and wipe us out completely at worst.
According to Musk, the start of humanity’s
decline begins with the fact that robots will
be able to do everything better than humans.
And, he means everything.
Adding to this worrying sentiment, Musk believes
that AI has the potential to start a third
world war.
In fact, it is all within an AI’s capability
to gain access to nuclear launch codes, deliver
fake data to rival nations and even replicate
human speech, all of which could lead to disastrous
results.
And there is something else that’s a worrying
possibility, especially if AI technology is
not widely available: it can be weaponized
without being fully understood.
So, it is not a 
stretch to think that AI will be the next
scientific breakthrough that will be used
to destroy.
And once this Pandora’s box is open, it
won’t be easy to close.
You may be thinking, if Musk is so sure that
AI could spell the end of civilization, why
on earth would he continue to push it further
and further.
Well, it makes sense that if Musk is at the
helm, then he can steer these advancements
in the right direction and away from the iceberg
which threatens to sink what could be our
greatest technological achievement.
And if he fails, he is obviously planning
on moving humanity to Mars and leaving Earth
to the robots.
LOL
***
On the other side of the proverbial fence
you have Zuckerberg who, upon hearing Musk’s
not so optimistic prophesies, vocally dismissed
them, and even called them irresponsible.
The CEO of Facebook is also understandably
invested in online security, especially after
the Cambridge Analytica shenanigans.
As Facebook and social media grow faster and
bigger, more advanced AI becomes necessary
to prevent misbehaviour and various types
of discrimination.
AI systems that can recognize faces, spot
spammers, remove fake accounts, and reduce
digital fraud are already in place.
Zuckerberg has made it clear that, without
AI, humans would not be able to handle digital
security to an acceptable level and even now
work is constantly being done to improve the
AI’s capabilities.
Musk and Zuckerberg used social media, interviews
and public statements to disavow the other’s
opinion.
And as is often the case with many scientists
and celebrities in an open disagreement with
one another, we have to ask who is right?
Well, in this case it’s both of them…
AND neither of them.
The conversation has lulled in recent months
because the two Silicon Valley residents took
a step back from the discussion and away from
the spotlight to focus on other projects (which
almost definitely involve AI).
That said, AI and its applications haven’t
slowed down in the slightest and that’s
something to keep in mind.
So, should we be preparing for a robot revolution
or is this an unnecessary concern which we
should ignore, and continue to enjoy the benefits
of our automated assistants?
While there are a plethora of moral implications
surrounding AI, it is unlikely that an AI
would have any self-awareness or bad intentions
until we develop a general or ‘super’
intelligence.
Right now, AI has the mental capacity of a
cockroach, so, as it stands, it needs to have
a specific purpose defined by its creator.
Although, with this in mind, it’s not a
far-reaching thought that in the wrong hands,
AI could potentially be world-ending.
Nonetheless, AI itself, in its current technological
state, bears no moral responsibility; that
belongs to the human who designs and controls
it.
Scary, yes, but we’re often not far from
a human, or group of humans, making a questionable
decision and causing harm.
That said, what Musk is more concerned about
is the long term.
Where we will be dealing with AGI and it will
be out of humanity’s control.
We are somewhat clueless when it comes to
how an AGI would think beyond the realms of
the human mind and therefore its behaviour
is unpredictable.
So maybe, Zuckerberg’s almost naïve optimism
that AI is humanities greatest hope seems
to overlook certain aspects of the long-term
that we should be paying attention to.
Nevertheless, he is probably correct in that,
in the present, AI is enhancing our lives
in ways we never thought possible.
And you can understand how someone wouldn’t
want progress to be stifled by regulations.
Consider, for example, that we now have AI
that can detect and treat 50 different types
of eye disease with 94% accuracy.
AI can also translate voice conversations
in at least 10 languages, redefining the idea
of bringing the world together.
So, who knows what it could do for us if we
allow progress to continue without barriers?
But what does all this tell us?
It tells us that neither CEO should be ignored.
Zuckerberg is right about the short term,
AI is a game changer and using it to our advantage
can give us a standard of living only seen
in utopian science fiction.
However, Musk’s concerns about AI are more
than justified: we’re playing with fire
and if we don’t put safety measures in place
early, we may be looking at a Skynet-like
reality sooner than we think.
