Tesla Boss Musk Quoted "Terminator" As An Example: Artificial Intelligence Is More Dangerous Than Nuclear Weapons
Tesla Boss Musk Quoted "Terminator" As An Example: Artificial Intelligence Is More Dangerous Than Nuclear Weapons
Musk said he invested in an artificial intelligence company called it.Tesla Automobile CEO Elon Musk posted this weekend :
Musk said he invested in an artificial intelligence company called it.
Tesla Automobile (:TSLA) CEO Elon Musk posted this weekend (August 3 local time): "The book "Super Intelligence" () written is worth reading, we need ten Be careful with artificial intelligence, it may be more dangerous than nuclear weapons.”
Musk then said in another message: "Hopefully we are not a super digital intelligence biobootloader. But unfortunately, the possibility is getting bigger and bigger."
In an interview with CNBC TV on June 17 this year, Musk expressed a similar view. Musk said at the time that he invested in an artificial intelligence company. However, his purpose in investing in this company is not to make money, but to "monitor" the development of artificial intelligence. A technology called "Recursive Cortical Network" was developed, which mainly simulates the human brain.
Musk mentioned Terminator in an interview, saying he hopes to ensure that this technology is used to serve human beings, rather than to do evil as described in Terminator. "In Terminator, they created AI not to do evil, but the result was something they had never expected at the beginning. So you have to be cautious about this high technology."
Team of artificial intelligence companies.
In addition to Musk, the head of the company Zuckerberg and the American celebrity Ashton Cooche, who played Jobs in the movie "Jobs", also invested in the company.
"Can machines think like the human brain?" This topic has long aroused the interest of major technology giants. A group of companies led by Google are eager to see the realization of this prospect, and are developing another totem of artificial intelligence - Driverless cars.
According to the Financial Times, Google has acquired at least a dozen robot companies in the past year and a half. Google also hired Ray, a thinker at the forefront of the times who once predicted that the "singularity" () was about to come. The singularity here refers to the point in time when artificial intelligence transcends human intelligence.
Not only Google. In December last year, a new artificial intelligence laboratory was established. Chinese Internet giant Baidu has also focused its main focus on the development of artificial intelligence recently. On May 17 this year, Baidu announced the appointment of one of the most authoritative scholars in the field of artificial intelligence, Ng (Ng), as Baidu's chief scientist. Two years ago, Ng taught him to recognize the cat's image after training the "Brain" (a neural network composed of 16,000 computers) with thousands of images of cats.