The New Yorkerのインスタグラム(newyorkermag) - 11月15日 03時21分


The computer scientist Geoffrey Hinton helped pioneer neural networks, machine-learning models that are inspired by the way neurons are connected in the brain. He thought of himself as participating in a project that might come to fruition a century in the future, after he died. He didn’t anticipate the speed with which neural-net technology would suddenly improve. Around a decade ago, an A.I. boom began, leading to the creation of systems like OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Google’s Bard, which many believe are starting to change the world in unpredictable ways.

Hinton left Google, which had acquired his startup for $44 million, earlier this year; he was worried about the potential of A.I. to do harm, and began giving interviews in which he talked about the “existential threat” that the technology might pose to humans. “It was striking to hear one of A.I.’s most prominent researchers give voice to such an alarming view,” Joshua Rothman writes, in a new Profile. At the link in our bio, Hinton discusses his career, his fears about the technology he helped build, and why we can’t be in denial about the ways in which A.I. will transform our world. Illustration by @danieliev.


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