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 leaving Google after ten years in order to warn about the dangers of the technology. His departure has strengthened the campaign, as did 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 “pause” on the development of AI? It’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…</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 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 to clarify 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 LaMDA 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>