Let’s be clear about what Geoffrey Hinton is saying about deep learning

<p>Geoffrey Hinton, considered by some the godfather of AI for his work in the field of deep learning, is&nbsp;leaving Google after ten years&nbsp;in order to&nbsp;warn about the dangers of the technology. His departure has strengthened the campaign, as did&nbsp;the open letter from a group of researchers about a month ago, to demonize anything based on machine learning algorithms based on the belief that they pose a threat to humankind.</p> <h2>A &ldquo;pause&rdquo; on the development of AI? It&rsquo;s not going to happen</h2> <h3>More than 1,000 technology experts, researchers and investors have signed an open letter expressly asking for a&hellip;</h3> <p>medium.com</p> <p>I repeat what I said a month ago: technologies cannot be uninvented, because if there is a benefit from using them, they will be used. Trying to prevent this is futile. We can aspire to regulate a given technology, but to do that&nbsp;we first need to understand it holistically, with all its possibilities and risks.</p> <p>Hinton himself, after seeing how The New York Times covered his decision, used Twitter&nbsp;to clarify&nbsp;that he had not left Google to criticize the company, and that, in fact, the company had acted very responsibly with respect to that technology. I said it at the time: Google refused to launch products based on&nbsp;LaMDA&nbsp;because it believed that a technology with that potential requires better controls, and is still requires a lot more work. But then OpenAI came along and launched ChatGPT in the best Silicon Valley style: launch first, iron out the problems later. And now, as they say, we are where we are.</p> <p><a href="https://medium.com/enrique-dans/lets-be-clear-about-what-geoffrey-hinton-is-saying-about-deep-learning-70b3490e44ea">Website</a></p>