Rapid AI proliferation is a threat to democracy, experts say
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[November 09, 2023]
By Anna Tong and Sheila Dang
(Reuters) - The acceleration of artificial intelligence may already be
disrupting democratic processes like elections and could even threaten
human existence, AI experts warned at the Reuters NEXT conference in New
York.
The explosion of generative AI - which can create text, photos and
videos in response to open-ended prompts - in recent months has spurred
both excitement about its potential as well as fears it could make some
jobs obsolete, upend elections and even possibly overpower humans.
“The biggest immediate risk is the threat to democracy…there are a lot
of elections around the world in 2024, and the chance that none of them
will be swung by deep fakes and things like that is almost zero,” Gary
Marcus, a professor at New York University, said in a panel at the
Reuters NEXT conference in New York on Wednesday.
One major concern is that generative AI has turbocharged deepfakes -
realistic yet fabricated videos created by AI algorithms trained on
copious online footage - which surface on social media, blurring fact
and fiction in politics.
While such synthetic media has been around for several years, what used
to cost millions could now cost $300, Marcus said.
Companies are increasingly using AI to make decisions including about
pricing, which could lead to discriminatory outcomes, experts warned at
the conference.
Marta Tellado, CEO of the nonprofit Consumer Reports, said an
investigation found that car owners who live in neighborhoods with a
majority Black or brown population, and in close proximity with a
neighborhood of mostly white residents, pay 30% higher car insurance
premiums.
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Artificial Intelligence words are seen in this illustration taken
March 31, 2023. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
"There's no transparency to the consumer in any way," she said
during a panel interview.
Another emerging threat that lawmakers and tech leaders must guard
against is the possibility of AI becoming so powerful that it
becomes a threat to humanity, Anthony Aguirre, founder and executive
director of the Future of Life Institute, said in an interview at
the conference.
“We should not underestimate how powerful these models are now and
how rapidly they are going to get more powerful,” he said.
The Future of Life Institute, a nonprofit aimed at reducing
catastrophic risks from advanced artificial intelligence, made
headlines in March when it released an open letter calling for a
six-month pause on the training of AI systems more powerful than
OpenAI's GPT-4. It warned that AI labs have been "locked in an
out-of-control race" to develop "powerful digital minds that no one
– not even their creators – can understand, predict, or reliably
control."
Developing ever-more powerful AI will also risk eliminating jobs to
a point where it may be impossible for humans to simply learn new
skills and enter other industries.
“Once that happens, I fear that it's not going to be so easy to go
back to AI being a tool and AI as something that empowers people.
And it's going to be more something that replaces people.”
(Reporting by Anna Tong in San Francisco; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
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