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X AI KOLs Following News

Summary

AI industry leaders reflect on public backlash against AI, noting that the industry underestimated the importance of putting people at the center, and emphasizing that while pursuing technological advancement, it is essential to ensure humans remain in control of the future and lead meaningful lives.

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TL;DR: AI industry leaders believe that public backlash against AI stems from concerns about human role and autonomy, not from skepticism about the technology’s benefits — the industry needs to demonstrate that humans will always remain in control and lead meaningful lives.

Reflections on the AI Backlash

When asked about the AI backlash, the interviewee pointed out that the industry underestimated the importance of keeping people at the center. He acknowledged that when companies announce that a certain model version “surpasses professional-level performance in 44 occupations,” such claims are bound to cause anxiety. “Totally agree. I wish we had said it surpasses professionals on small tasks in 44 occupations.” He emphasized that people using these tools do see tremendous productivity, growth, and wage gains, but their anxiety is legitimate. “This is one of the major shifts. So it wouldn’t be wise to not approach it with some real caution.”

Human-Centered Economy and Human Values

The interviewee explicitly rejected the narrative that “AI will eliminate jobs.” “I have no interest in building a superintelligent AI that pursues some non-human goal. This has to serve humanity, with humans at the center.” He argued that the problem is not that the industry failed to explain the technology’s benefits — people do believe AI can cure diseases — but rather that it failed to clarify “how humans will remain in control of the future every step of the way and live truly meaningful lives in every dimension we care about.” When some say “there will be no jobs in the future, you’ll get a basic income, but you no longer have a real role,” the interviewee flatly stated, “that’s terrifying.” He warned that if AI companies claim they will destroy all jobs while becoming the world’s most valuable companies, the public reaction is predictable.

Pace of Change and Public Anxiety

The conversation touched on the release cadence of models: “a major model roughly every six weeks.” The interviewee noted that the public already believes models are getting smarter — much like the expectation for iPhone iterations — but what they really want to know is “what will happen to society.” Industry leaders don’t have fully definitive answers, but he stressed that the company’s entire effort is about “putting this new kind of massive infrastructure into people’s hands, and trusting that the democratization of power, wealth, opportunity, and autonomy will continue to drive this civilization toward an incredible future story.”

Global Competition and Safety Considerations

When asked whether the “race with China” constitutes a reason to go full speed ahead, the interviewee replied, “in some ways yes, in some ways very dangerous.” He noted that in the past, for issues like the International Atomic Energy Agency’s handling of atomic energy, nations came together and said “none of us should take risks that affect the entire globe.” He believes that for economic issues and healthcare uses, different countries can take different approaches, but for “truly major matters, ensuring we never lose control” requires a global consensus.

Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4qGz2uFuRvs

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