
Nobel laureates urge strong AI regulation
The Hindu
Nobel Prize winners emphasize the importance of regulating AI for global benefit and safety concerns.
Physics Nobel Prize winner Geoffrey Hinton and chemistry laureate Demis Hassabis on Saturday insisted on a need for strong regulation of artificial intelligence, which played a key role in their awards.
"AI is a very important technology to regulate but I think it's very important that we get the regulations right and I think that's the hard thing at the moment is it's such a fast moving technology," Hassabis told a news conference in Stockholm.
Hassabis, who jointly won with Americans David Baker and John Jumper for revealing the secrets of proteins through AI, said such evolutionary speed posed a giant challenge.
But the underlying issue, he said, is "about what do we want to use these systems for, how do we want to deploy them and making sure that all of humanity benefits from what these systems can do."
British-Canadian Hinton, considered the "Godfather of AI," conceded that "I wish I'd thought about safety earlier," in allusion to his fears about the potential for AI to ramp up the arms race.
Hinton, who made headlines when he quit Google last year and warned of the dangers machines could one day outsmart people, was awarded his Nobel along with American John Hopfield for work on artificial neural networks.
"Governments are unwilling to regulate themselves when it comes to lethal autonomous weapons and there is an arms race going on between all the major arms suppliers like the United States, China, Russia, Britain, Israel.

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