Elon Musk Talk About AI Tech in the Future. - podcast episode cover

Elon Musk Talk About AI Tech in the Future.

Nov 11, 202351 min
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Elon Musk Talk About AI Tech in the Future.

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Okay, all right, well, good evening, everybody. Welcome Elon, thanks for being here, Thank you for having me. We feel very prov we're excited to have you. Right, So I'm going to start with some questions and then we're going to open it up. Let me get straight into it. So Bill Gates said, there is no one in our time who has done more to push the bounds of science innovation than you. What's kind of going to say, Well, that's a nice thing to have anyone say

about you. Nice coming from Bill Gates. But oddly enough, when it comes to AI, actually for around a decade you've almost been doing the opposite and saying, hang on, you need to think about what we're doing and what we're pushing here, and what do we do to make this safe? And actually maybe we shouldn't be pushing as faster or as hard as we are. I mean, you've been doing it for a decade, Like what was it that caused you to think about it that way? And you know,

why do we need to be worried? Yeah? I've been somewhat of a Cassandra for quite a while where people would I would tell you, like we should really be con learned about aid, like, what are you talking about? Like, I've never really had any experience with AI, but since I was immersed in technology, I have been immersed in technology for a long time, I could see it coming. So but I think this year was that

there have been a number of breakthroughs. I mean, you know, the point of which someone can see a dynamically created video of themselves, you know, like it sort you can make a video of you saying anything in real time or me, And so there's sort of the deep bake videos which are really incredibly good, in fact, sometimes more convincing than real ones and a bit deep real and and then and then obviously things like chat GPT we were

quite remarkable. Now I saw GPT one, GPT two, GPT three, GPT four that you know, the whole sort of lead up to that, So it was easy for me to kind of see where it's going. If you just sort of extrapolate the points on a curve and as seeing that train will continue, then we will have profound, artificially intelligence and obviously at a level that far exceeds human intelligence. So I'm glad to see at this point that people are taking safety seriously and I'd like I say thank you for holding

this AI safety conference. I think actually will go down in history as being very important. I think it's really quite profound, and I do think overall that the potential is there for artificial intelligence AI too have most likely a positive effect and to create a future of abundance where there is no scarcity of goods and services. But it is somewhat of the magic genie problem where if you have a magic genie that can grant all the wishes, usually those stories don't

end well. Who care for what you wish for? Including wishes? Yeah, so you talked a little bit about the summit and thank you for being engaged in it, which has been great and people enjoyed having you there. Puspending in this dialogue now, one of the things that we achieved today in the meetings between the companies and the leaders was an agreement that externally, ideally, governments should be doing safety testing of models before they're released. I think

this is something that you've spoken about a little bit. It was something we worked really hard on because you know, my job in government is to say, hang on, there is a potential risk here, not a not a definite risk, but a potential risk of something that could be bad. My job is to protect the country and we can only do that if we develop the capability we need in our safety Institute and then go in and make sure we can test the models before they are released. Delight of that that happened

today. But you know, what's your view on what we should be doing, right you've talked about the potential risk? Right again, we don't know, but you know, what are the types of things governments like our should be doing to manage and mitigate against those risks. Well, generally think that it is good for government to play a role when the public safety is at risk. So you know, really, for the vast majority of software, the public safety is not at risk. I mean, if if the app

crashes on your phone, your laptop, it's not a massive catastrophe. But when you're talking about digital superintelligence, I think, which does pose a risk to the public, then there is a role for government to play to safeguard the interest of the public. And this is of course true in many fields, you know, aviation, cars, you know, I deal with regulators throughout the world because of stalling being communications, rockets being aerospace, and cars

you know, being tracked vehicle transport. So I'm very familiar with dealing with with regulators, and I actually agree with the vast majority of regulations. There's a few that I disagree with from time to time, but zero point one percent, probably less than one percent of regulations I disagree with. So there is some concern and from people in Silicon Valley who who've never dealt with regulators before, and they think that this is gonna just crush innovation and slow them

down and be annoying. But and and it will be annoying. It's true, they're not wrong about that. But but I think there's we've learnt over the years that having a referee is a good thing. And if you look at any sports game, there's always a referee, and and nobody's suggesting I think to have a sports game with that one. And I think that's the right way to think about this, is for for governed to be a referee, to make sure the sportsmanlike conduct and that the public safety is you know,

it is addressed that we care about the public safety. Because I think there might be at times too much optimism about technology. And I speak I say that as a technologist. I mean, so I ought to know and and like said, on balance, I think that that the AI will be a forcible good most likely, but the probability of it going bad it is not zero. Said, so we just need to mitigate the downside potential. And then how you talk about referee and that's what we're demonstrate. Yeah,

well there we go. I mean, you know, and we talked about this and Demos and I discussed this a long time ago, like literally facing right and actually Demister his credit and the credit of people in the industry, did say that to us. I think you say, it's not right that Demis and his colleagues are marking their own homework, right, there needs to be someone independent, and that's why we've developed the Safety Institute here. I

mean, do you think governments can develop the expertise. One of the things we need to do is say, hang on, you know, Demis and Sam all the others have got a lot of very smart people doing this. Governments need to quickly tool up capability wise, personnel wise, which is what we're doing. I mean, do you think it is possible for governments to do that fast enough, given how quickly the technology is developing, or what do we need to do to make sure we do do it quick enough.

No, I think it's good. It's a great point you're making. The pace of AI is faster than any technology I've seen in history by far, and it seems to be growing in capability by at least fivefold, perhaps tenfold per year. It'll certainly grow by an automatitude next year. Yeah, so

so, and government isn't used to moving at that speed. But I think even if there are not firm regulations, even if there's not even if there isn't an enforcement capability, so we're having insight and being able to highlight concerns to the public will be very powerful. So even if that's all that's accomplished, I think that will be very very good. Okay, yeah, well hopefully we can do better than that, hopefully. Yeah. Yeah, No,

but that's how fast we were talking before. It was striking. You're someone who spent their life in technology. They're living More's law. And what it was interesting over the last couple of days talking to everyone who's doing the development of this, and I think you concur with this is is just the pace of advancement here is unlike anything all of you have seen in your careers and technology. Is that fair because you've got these kind of compounding effects from

the hardware and the data and the personnel. Yeah, I mean the two currently the two leading centers for a development are the San Fransco Bay area and the sort of London area, And there are many other places where it's being done, but those are two leading areas. So I think if you know, if the United States and the UK and China are sort of aligned on safety, that's all going to be a good thing. That's really that's where

that's where the leadership is generally. You actually you mentioned China there. So I took a decision to invite China to summit over the last three days, and it was not an easy decision. A lot of people criticizes me for, you know, my view as if you're going to try serious conversation, you need to. But what would your thoughts? You do business all around the world. You just talked about it there. Should we be engaging with them? Can we trust them? Is that the right thing to have done?

If we don't, if China is not on board with AI safety, it's somewhat of a moot situation. The single biggest objection that I get to any kind of AI regulation or sort of safety controls are well, China is not going to do it, and therefore they will just jump into the lead and exceed us all But actually China is willing to participate in AI safety and thank you for inviting them, and they you know, I think we should

thank China for attending. When I was when I was in China earlier this year, my main subject of discussion with this the leadership in China was a safety and saying that this this is really something that they they should care about, and they took it seriously and and and you are too, which is which is great. And having them here I think was essential. Really if the if they're if they're not participants, it's it's pointless. Yeah, that's

and I think we were pleased. I think they were engaged yesterday in the discussions and actually ended up signing the same communicy that everyone else did, which is a good stop, right. And I said, if we need everyone to approach us in a similar way, if we're going to have a realistic chance of resolving it. I was going to tell you you talked about innovation

earlier and regulation being annoying. There was a good debate today we had about open source, and I think you've kind of been a proponent of algorithmic transparency and making some of the ex algorithms public and you actually we were talking about every hint and on the way in. You know, he's particularly been very concerned about open source models being used by bad actors. You've got a group of people who say they are critical to innovation happening in that distributed way.

Look, it's it's a trick. There's probably no perfect answer, and there is a tricky balance your thoughts on how we should approach this open source question or where should we be targeting whatever regulatory or monitoring that we're going to do well. The open source algorithms and data tend to lag the closed source by

six to twelve months. So that but given the rate of improvement that there's actually therefore quite a big difference between the closed source and the and the open If things are improving by a factor of let's say five or more than being a year behind is you're five times worse. So it's a pretty big difference. And that might be actually an okay situation, but it certainly we'll get to the point where you've got open source AI that can do that, that

will start to approach human level intelligence, will PHAPS succeeded. I don't know quite what to do about it. I think it's somewhat inevitable. There will be some amount of open source, and I guess I would have a slight bias towards open source because at least you can see what's going on. It wears closed source. You don't know what's going on. Now, it should be said with AI that even if it's an open source, do you actually

know what's going on? Because if you've got a gigantic data file and you know sort of billions of data points or weights and parameters, you can't just read it and see what it's going to do. It's a gigantic file of inscrutable numbers. You can test it when you when you run it, you can test it. You can run a bunch of tests to see what it's

going to do. But it's probabilistic as opposed to deterministic. It's not it's not like traditional programming, where you've got it you've got very discrete logic and the outcome is very predictable, and you can read each line and see what each line is going to do. A neural net is just a whole bunch of probabilities. I mean, it sort of ends up being a giant Comma separated value file. It's like our digital guide is a CSP file. Really

okay, but that's kind of what it is. Yeah, Now, that point you've just made is one that we have been talking about a lot, because again conversations with the people are developing their technology make the point that you've just made. It is not like normal software where there's predictability about inputs improving leading to this particular output improving, and as the models iterate and improve,

we don't quite know what's going to come out the other end. I think Demis would agree with that, which is why I think there is this bias for Look, we need to get in there while the training runs are being done, before the models are released, to understand what is this new iteration broad about in terms of capability, which it sounds like you would would agree

with. I was going to shift Goz a little bit on. You know, you've talked a lot about human consciousness human agency, which actually might strike people as as strange given that you are known for being such a brilliant innovator and technologist, but it's it's quite heartfelt when I hear you talk about it

and the importance of maintaining that agency in technology and preserving human consciousness. Now it kind of links to the thing I was going to ask, is when I do interviews or talk to people out and about in this job about AI, the thing that comes up most actually is it probably not so much the stuff we've been talking about, but jobs. It's what is AI mean for my job? Is it going to mean that I don't have a job or

my kids are not going to have a job. Now, you know, my answer as a policymaker, as a leader is actually, AI is already creating jobs, and you can see that in the companies that are starting. Also, the way it's being used is a little bit more as a co pilot necessarily, versus replacing the person. There's still human agency, but it's helping you do your job better, which is a good thing. And as we've seen with technological revolutions in the past, clearly there's change in the labor

market the amount of jobs. I was quoting an MIT study today that they did a couple of years ago is something like sixty percent of the jobs at that moment exists forty years ago, so hard to predict. And my job is to create an incredible education system, whether it's at school, whether it's retraining people at any point in their career, because ultimately, if we've got a skill population, they'll be able to keep up with the pace of change

and have a good life. But you know that it's still a concern. And what would your kind of observation be on AI and the impact on labor markets and people's jobs and how they should feel about that as they think about this. Well, I think we are seeing the most disruptive force in history here. You know, we have for the first time, we will have for the first time something that is smarter than the smartest human and that I mean, it's hard to say exactly what that moment is, but there will

come a point where no job is needed. You can have a job if you want to have a job for sort of personal satisfaction, but the AI will be able to do everything. So I don't know if that makes people comfortable uncomfortable, it's it's you know, That's why that's why I say, if you, if you, if you wish for a magic genie that gives you any wishes you want, and there's no limit. You don't have those three limits three wish limits, not since you just have many as many wishes

as you want. So it's both good and bad. One of the challenges in the future will be how do we find meaning in life if if you have a magic genie that can do everything you want. I do think we's it's hard. You know, when there's when when there's new technology, it tends to have usually follow an S curve. In this case, we're going to be on the exponential portion of the S curve for a long time, and we have to like so we able to ask for anything. And it

won't be we won't have universal basic income. We'll have universal high income. So in some in some sense it will be somewhat of a leveler or an equalizer, because really I think everyone will have access to this magic Jenny anyway, able to ask any question. It will certainly be good for education, you could it'll be the best tutor you could add them the most patient tutor, UH said there all day. And there will be no shortage of goods

and services, will be an age of abundance. I think if i'd recommend people read in Banks, the Banks culture books are probably the best in visioning. In fact, not probably, they're definitely by far the best envisioning of an a future. There's nothing even close. So I'd recommend, really recommend Banks. I'm a very big fan. All these books are good. There's

not Jay which one all of them. So so that's that'll give you a sense of what is a I guess a fairly utopian or pro topin future with with Ai, which is good for as you said, it's a universal high income, which is a nice phrase, and that's it's good from a kind of materialistic sense of abundance. Actually, that then leads to the question that you pose, right, I'm someone who believes, you know, work gives you meaning. I write a lot about that. As you know, I

think work is a good thing. It, you know, gives people purpose in their lives. And if you then remove a large chunk of that, you know, what does that mean? And where do you get that? You know, where do you get that drive, that motivation, that purpose? I mean you're talking about it. You work a lot of hours,

you know, as I was mentioning, when we were talking earlier. I have to somewhat engage in liberate suspension of disbelief because I'm putting so much blood, sweat and tears into a work project and burning the you know, three am oil. Then I'm like, wait, why am I doing this? I can just wait for the AI to do it. I'm just lashing myself for no reason. Must be a gutton for punishment or something. So we called called called demos and tell them to hurry up and then you can have

a holiday. It's the plan. Yeah, No, it's a Look, it's a tricky. It's a tricky thing because I think you know, part of our job is to make sure that we can navigate to that very I think largely positive place that you're described people through it between now and then, because these things bring a lot aboutter change in in the labor market as we've seen. Yeah, I think it's probably is generally a good thing because you know, there are a lot of jobs that are uncomfortable or dangerous or which

sort of tedious, and the computer will have no problem doing that. We're happy to do that all day long. So you know, it's it's fun to cook food, but it's not that fun to wash the dishes, but the computer is perfectly happy to watch the dishes. I guess there is.

You know, we still have sports like where where humans compete and like the Olympics, and obviously a machine can can go faster than any human, but we still have we still humans race against each other and and have a you know, these sports competitions against each other where even though the machines are better, which I guess computnitity, who can be the best human at something?

And people do find performing in that. So I guess that's perhaps a good example of how even when machines are faster than are stronger than us, we still find a way we saw enjoy computing against other humans, so at leaste, who was the best human? Yeah, that's a good it's a good analogy. And we've been talking a lot about managing the risks. Just before we move on and finish on AI is just talk a little bit about the opportunities. You know, you're engaged in lots of different companies. You're an

obvious line which is doing which is doing some exciting stuff. You touched on the thing that I'm probably most excited about, which is an education. Yeah, and I think many people will have seen sal CON's video from earlier this year. Is Ted talk about as you talked about, it's like a personal tutor. Yeah, an amazing personal tutor, an amazing personal tutor. And we know the difference in learning having that personal tutor is incredible compared to class

from learning. So if you can have every child, I'll have a personal tutor specifically for them that then just evolves with them over time. Yeah, it could be extraordinary. And so that you know, for me, I look at it, I think, gosh, that is within reach at this point. And that's one of the benefits I'm most excited about. When you look at the landscape of things that you see as possible, what is it that you know you are particularly excited about. I think certainly AI AI tutors

are going to be amazing, perhaps already are. I think there's also perhaps companionship, which may seem odd because how can the computer really be your friend?

But if you if you have an AI that has memory, you know, and remembers all of your interactions and has read everything, you've got to actually like give it permission to read everything you've ever done, so it really will know you better than anyone, perhaps even yourself, and and and where you can talk to it every day and those conversations spoiled upon each other, you will actually have a great friend as long as that friend can stay your

friend and not get turned off or something. Don't turn off my friends. But I think that will actually be a real thing. And I have a one of my sons is sort of has some learning disabilities and has trouble making friends actually, and I was like, well, you know he AI friend would actually be a great fri enid Okay, you know's that was a surprising answer. That's actually it's worth worth reflecting on that. That's really interesting.

I mean we're already seeing it actually as we deliver you know, psychotherapy anyway, now doing far more by digitally and by telephone to people, and it's making a huge difference. And you can see a world and which actually, you know, AI can provide that social benefit to people. Just a quick question on on X and then we should open it up to everybody. You made a change when in one of the made many changes, but one of

the one of the changes, We've got a real thing about it. You really do, really do one of the changes which you know kind of you know, it goes into the space that you know, we have to operate in. And this, this balance between free speech and moderation is you know,

we grapple with as politicians. You were grappling with your own version of that, and you you moved away from a kind of manual human way of doing it, the moderation to the community notes and yeah, and I think that's you know, it was an interesting change, right, It's not what everyone else has done. It would be good, you know, what's what was the reasoning behind that? And why do you think that is a better

way to do that? Yeah? Part of the problem is if you if you empower people as sensors, then well there's going to be some amount of bias they have, and then whoever appoints the sensors is effectively in control of information. So then the idea behind community notice, well, how do we have a consensus driven I mean, so it's not really censoring it, but consensus driven approach to truth? How do we how do we how do we

make things the least amount untrue? Like you say, like what you can't perhaps get to pure truth, but you can aspire to be more truthful So the thing about community notes is it doesn't actually delete anything. It simply adds context. And that context could be this thing is untrue for the following reasons. And but but importantly with community notes, everything is open source actually,

so you can see the software, every line of the software. You can see all of the data that went into a community note, and and you can independently create that community note. So if you've got if you see a manipulations of data, you can actually highlight that and say well this, this, this, the appears to be some gaming of the system, and you

can suggest improvement. So it's it's it's maximum transparency, which is i think combined with the kind of wisdom of the crowds and transparency to get to a better answer is you. And really one of the key elements of community notes is that in order for a note to be shown, people who have historic

disagreed must agree. And there is a bit of AI usage here, so there's will populate a parameter space around each contributor to community notes, and then the parameter space so everyone's got basically these these vectors associated with them, which so it's it's not as simple as as right or left it's saying it's it's

more, it's several hundred vectors. That that because things are more complicated than something right right or left and and and then will we'll do sort of inverse correlation, say like, okay, these these people generally disagree, but they agree about this note. Okay, so then that so then that that that gives the note credibility. Yeah, that's that's the that's the core of it. And it's working quite well. I get to see a note actually be

be present for more than a few hours that that is incorrect. So the batting average is extremely good. And when I ask PEP, people say, oh, they're worried about community notes sort of being dis like, send me one and then they can't. So so I think it's I think it's quite good. I mean, the general aspiration is with the X platform is to inform and entertain the public and to be as accurate as possible and as truthful

as possible, even if someone doesn't like the truth. You know, people don't always like the truth, not always, but that's that's that's the aspiration. And I think if we are if we stay true to the truth, then I think we'll find that people use the system to learn what is going on and to learn. I think actually truth pays, so I think it'll be what I mean, assuming you don't want to engage your self delusion, then I think it's it's the smart move. So excellent, very helpful.

Right, let's open it up to all our guests here, and we've got some microphones that they'll come. Put your hands up, they'll come and find you. We got yes, go for it. Thank you, good evening. Alice Bentink from Entrepreneur. First, thank you for a fascinating conversation. I suppose a question for each of you, Prime Minister. The UK has some of the best universities in the world, we have the talent. What will it takes the UK to be a real breeding ground for unicorn companies?

And elon being a founder in the UK is still a non obvious career choice for the most exceptional technical talent. What are the cultural elements that we need to put into place to change this? Thank you both. Well you want to go first, go for it? Sure? Well, you're right that there are cultural elements where you know, the culture should celebrate creating new companies and there should be a bias towards supporting small, small companies because they're the

ones that need nurturing. The larger companies really don't need nurturing. So you know, just you can think of it's sort of like a garden. If it's a little sprout that needs needs nurturing, if it's a mighty oak, it doesn't need quite as much. So I think that that is a mindset change that is important. But but I should mention that London is you know, London and San Francisco or the Bay Area are really the two census for AI. So that so London is actually doing very well on that front.

That the two I said, the two leading locations on Earth. You know, San Francisco's probably head of London, but London is really very strong. But London Area, greater London home counties, I guess, keep keep going. So I'm just saying objectively this is the case. And but you do need that. You need you need the infrastructure, need, you need landlords who are willing to rant to new companies, who you need law firms and accounts that are willing to support new companies. And it's generally it is a

mindset change, and I think some of that is happening. But I think really it's just culturally people need to decide this is this is a good thing. Yeah yeah, actually, well thanks for what you said about the UK. It's something that we work hard on. Lots of people in the room are part of what makes this a fabulous place for companies, including Alice.

So that's what i'd say is my job is to get all the you know, the nuts and bolts right, make sure that all of you are starting companies can raise a capital that you need everything from you know, your seed funding with our incredible you know eis tax release all the way through to you know, your late stage rounds. And we need reform of our pension funds and the Chancellor's got a bunch of incredible reforms to unlock capital from all the

people who have it and deploy it into growth equity. Right, that is a work in progress. We're not there yet, but I think we're we're making We're making good progress. We need talent, we need people, you know, so that means an education system that prioritizes the things that matter. And you've seen my reforms. I go on about more matt, more maths, more maths, but I think that it's important, but also attracting the

best and the brightest here. If you look at our fastest growing companies in this country, and I think it's probably the same in the US, over half of them have a non British founder, right, And so that tells you we've got to be a place that is open to the world's best and brightest entrepreneurial talent. So the visa regime that we've put in place, I

think, does that makes it easy for those people to come here. And then actually it's the thing that we've spent the beginning of the session talking about the regulation, right, making sure that we've got a regulatory system that's pro innovation. That Yeah, of course we always need guardrails on the things that will worry us, but we've got to create a space for people to innovate

and do different things. Now, those are all my jobs. The thing that is tougher is the thing that Elon talked about, which is culture. Right, It's how do you transpose that culture from places like Silicon Valley across the world where people are unafraid to give up the security of a regular paycheck to go and start something, be comfortable with failure, You talk about that

a lot. I think you talk about it more and when you're playing games, right, but that you've got to be comfortable failing and knowing that that's just part of the process. And that is as a tricky cultural thing to do overnight, but it's an important part of I think creating that kind of

environment. Yeah, if you don't succeed with your first startup, it shouldn't be a sort of a catastrophic career ending exactly, thing it should be you know, well good I think generally should like should be like, well, you know, you gave it a good shot, you know, and and and now try again and exactly. It's so one thing I'm going to mention is like, obviously creating a company is sort of a high risk, high

reward situation. But I don't know quite what the how it works in the UK, I think probably better than continental Europe, but the stock options are very difficult in most parts of Europe. I'm not sure how does you give it. But if somebody's basically going to risk the sort of life savings and with and the vast majority of startups fail, So I mean you hear about the startups that succeed, but most companies are most startups consist of you know,

a massive amount of work followed by failure. That's actually most most companies. And so it's a high risk kigh reward and so the higher reward part does need to be there for it to make sense. I think that was a very soft pitch for a tax policy that I need chance that. But actually I can tell you so like AI agree, and we have so we have, I think relative to certainly European countries, but certainly the US,

definitely California a much lower rate of capital gains tax right. So for those people who are risking and growing something like, we think the reward should be there at the end. So it's twenty percent capital gains tax right. And on stock options, I don't know if we've got anyone from Index Ventures in the room. So Index one of our bleeding VC funds here. They do

a regular report looking at most countries' tax treatment of stock options. And you know, when I was a Chancellor of Treasury Sexuary equivalent, you know, we were I think down at we were pretty good, but we were fourth or fifth. Then I said we need to for exactly the reason that you mentioned was like this has got to be the best place for renovative We need to move that up. And I think in the last iteration of that report we had because of the changes that Jeremy and I have made, we have

moved up to I think second from memory. Hopefully that actually give you and everyone else some comfort that we recognize. That's important because when people work hard and risk things, yeah, they should be able to enjoy the rewards high reward. Yeah. And I think we have a we very much have a tax system that supports that. And those are the values that you know, I believe in, and I think most of us in this room probably do as well. Right, next, next question, I've got seven front of

me, and then I'll come over here. Gone gone, So thanks very much. We've talked about some really big ideas, global changing ideas. I'm really interested, particularly in the Contexte creation of science and technology, superhubs and so on. How does that app onto the everyday lives of people living in say Austin, Texas, to choose around you and more in my case Nottingham, East Midlands. Uh, what what is? How do you see that

evolving for people? You know every day sort of every day effective AI for context, Elon so SEB. SEB runs our equivalent of CDs, right or Walgreens, so you know when actually I visited, right, So he's got millions of people coming in the shops every day, and it's making sure how do we make this relevant? I think is your question, how is this relevant to that person? You know? Maybe actually let me go I'll go

first on that because I think it's a fair a fair point. I was just going over with the team a couple of things that we're doing because I was saying, like, how are we doing AI right now that it's making a difference to people's lives. And we have this thing called gov dot UK, which is which actually when we when it happened several years ago, was a pioneering thing. All the government information brought together on one website, gov dot uk, so you need to get a driving license, passport, any

interaction with government. It was centralized in a very easy, relatively easy to use way, better than most. So we're about so we're about to deploy AI across that PI form. So that is something that I think, you know, several million people a day use right, so a large chunk of the population is interacting with gov dot UK every single day to do all these day to day tasks. Right, every one of your customers is doing all those things, and so we're about to deploy AI into that to make that

whole process so much easier. Because you know, some people will be like, look, well I'm currently here and I've lost my passport and my flights in five hours. You know at the moment that would require you know how many steps to figure out what you do? You know, well, actually, when we deploy the AI, it should be that you could just literally

say that and boom boom boom, bom boom. This is what we're going to do walking through it, and that's going to benefit millions of millions of people every single day, right, Because that's a very practical way in my seat, that I can start using this technology to help people in their day to day lives, not just healthcare discoveries and everything else that we're also doing.

But I thought that's quite a powerful demonstration of literally your day to day customer seeing actually their just day to day life get a little bit easier because of something that you know, Elon Demis and others in this room have helped create. Yeah, exactly, The most immediate thing is just being able to ask, like having a very smart friend that you can ask anything, you know, ask how to make something, how to solve any problem, and

it'll tell you so. And obviously companies are going to adopt this, so I think maybe you'll have much better customer service. I guess essentially that'll probably be the first thing you notice. And then if we talked about education, so having a tutor, so if you're trying to understand a subject, like having a phenomenal tutor on any subject, is that that's really pretty much there already almost. I mean we need to obviously, I need to stop hallucinating

before you know it can't give you. I mean that we still have a little bit of the problem where it can give you an answer that's competently wrong with great grammar and you know, in bullet points and everything in citations, it was not real. So that's be okay. We need to make sure it's it's not it's not it's not giving you competently wrong tunor answers. But

but that's going to happen pretty quickly where it is actually correct. So yeah, I'm gonna say for any for any parent who was homeschooling during COVID and realizing what their kids needed to be helped with. That will come as an enormous relief. I think, yeah, very very good. Right have we got let's go questions over here? Who have we got? We only microphones

or brand you they're perfect? Hi, Brent Herman. So you know you've spoken eloquently about abundance in the Age of abundance, So it feels obviously with AI it's everything else were everywhere all at once. But with robots, and to get the age of abundance, we'll need a lot of robots. I know you're working on robots as well. Are there sort of constraints that we should think of our politician should be thinking of that we might get one country

might get heavily behind in robots. They can do all these things and end to the age of bunds and therefore be it a strategic disadvantage. Well, really, anything that can be actuated by a computer is effectively a robot. So you can think of frankly, Tesla cars or robots on wheels. Anything that's connected to the Internet is effectively an endpoint actuator for artificial intelligence. So you've got Bust and Dynamics. Obviously, they've been making impressive robots for a

while. I think there are at this point mostly on by Hundai, So I guess who is probably gonna make robots of that are humanoid and and some interesting shapes that I wasn't just patting, like the one that looks like a has wheels and looks sort of like a kangaroo on wheels. I'm sure what that is, but it looks a little demanded, frankly. But but there's gonna be all sorts of all sorts of robots. You've got the company Dison in the UK, which I think there's some pretty impressive things. I think

the UK will not be behind actually on that front. UK also has ARM, which is really the best one one of the best paths, the best in chip design in the world. Tees I use a lot of a lot of ARM technology. Almost everyone does, actually, so I think UK is in a strong position. Germany obviously makes a lot of robots, natural robots that I mean, I think generally countries that make robots of any kind,

even if they seem somewhat conventional'll be We'll be fine. I do think there is a there is a safety concern, especially with humanoid robots, because at least the car can't chase you into this building not very easily, you know, or chase you over a tree, or you know, you can sort of run up a flight of stairs and get away from a tesla. I think it's a Stephen King movie about that if your car gets possessed. So, but if you have a humanoid robot, it can it can basically chase

you anywhere. So I think we should have some kind of hardwired local cutoff that you can't update from the internet. So anything that can be software updated from the internet obviously can be overridden. But if you have a local sort of off switch where you have to say a keyword or something, and then that puts the robot into a safe state, some kind of localized safe state ability, an off switch, you know, where you don't have to get

too close to the robot. I don't know, if we've got millions of these things going over the place, you're not selling it, just you know, I know, I'm saying this is something we should be quite concerned about because Robert Robert can follow you anywhere. Then you know what if they just one day get a software update, and they're not so friendly anymore. We've

got a James Cameron movie on our house. It's actually that's it's funny you're saying that because in our session that we had today, you know, just I would say who they made exactly the same point right then, as we're talking about they're talking about movies actually about mentioning James Cameron. They're talking about James cameeron movies, and they're saying, if you think about it's not just those movies, but any of these movies, trains, subways, metro.

They said, all these movies with the same plot fundamentally all end with the person turning it off right or finding a way to shut the thing down.

And they were making the same point that you were about the importance of actual physical off switches and so all the technology is great, but undamentally, the same movie has played out fifty times, we've all watched it, and all fundamentally, you know, you know, the point I'm revenged right or ends in pretty much the same way with someone finding a way to just do the

wrong. Which is kind of interesting that you've said a similar point. Right, it's not the it's not the obvious place you'd go to, but be One of the tests for the AI was just so like, blank is your favorite Dreamers camera movie? Excellent? Right, Yes, we got over there. Yeah, perfect, Hi question for you both. So I'm a founder of a AI and mL scale up in the third center for AI, which

is leads in the North of England a bit biased. Since the launch of chat GBT three months after that, we saw a real increase in phishing attacks using much more sophisticated language patterns. What do we do to protect businesses consumers that they trust this technology better and how do we bring them along that journey with us? Well, I think we shouldn't trust it that much. Actually, it is actually quite quite a significant challenge because we're getting to the point

where even open source AI can pass human capture tests. So you know this, are you a human identify all the traffic lights in this picture? You're like, Okay, it's going to have no problem doing that. In fact, it'll do it better than the human and faster than human. So we're like, how do you you know at the point which is better a better human? Better passing human tests than humans? Then well, what tests actually make sense? That is a real problem. I don't actually have a good

solution to it. That's one of the things we're trying to figure out on the XP form is how to deal with that, because it really we really are at the point where even with with open source, you know, readily available AI, you don't need to be sort of leading in the field. You can actually be better than humans at passing these tests. And that's sort of why we think, well, perhaps we should sort of charge a dollar

or a pound a year. It's a very tiny amount of money, but it's it's still it still makes it privatively expensive to make a million bots. So and especially if you need a million payment methods, then you run out of sort of stolen credit cards pretty quickly. So that that's that's sort of where we're thinking, like we might have to sort of just charge some very tiny amount of moneyo point three cents a day effectively to deal with the the

onsought of AI powered bonds. And if if and that that is that is spilit growing problem, but it will be I think perhaps an insurmountable problem next year. So and then you have to worry about, well, manipulation of information is making something seem very popular when in fact it it's not because it's getting boosted by all these likes and reposts from AI powered barts. So that's why I sort of think somewhat inevitably it leads to some small payment in order

to dramatically increase the cost of a bart. So I think I frankly, I think probably any social media system it doesn't do that. Also believe you over on my bart. You know, I think my general answer would be, you know, we need to show that we are on top of mitigating

the risks right so people can trust the technology. That's what actually the last couple of days has been about on the Safety Summit is just showing, you know, we're investing in the Safety Institute, having the people who can do the research on these things to figure out how we mitigate against them, and we have to do it fast, and we have to keep iterating it because all of us probably in this room, believe that the technology can be incredibly

powerful, but we've got to make sure we bring people along that journey with us, that we're handling the risks that are there and as there's a job to do, and the last couple of days I think we make good progress on it. Because we want to focus on the positives and manage these things. But that requires action, and that's what the last couple of days has been about your your story, you know, analogy. There was part of the research that actually, you know, the team working on the task force

here published and presented yesterday. I don't know if you saw it was, which is essentially that it was a using AI to do to create a ton of fake profiles on social media and then infiltrate particular groups with particular information. And actually, at the moment that, as I said to your point, there's a cost free it's getting. It's getting at the point where it's like, really, you're going to have one hundred for a penny sort of thing.

Ridiculous. And if you think about some of these social networks that quite a neighborhood or town levels, not that many big profiles that you need to quickly create. Suddenly they're everywhere and there's some local issue that might be of importance, and you know, the team have run versions of how that would look like, and suddenly they're interacting with everybody and then spreading and misinformation around.

Were literally as part of the research that we published on this information yesterday. It's a it's a real challenge. Yeah, exactly to your point. I mean the images. You don't even need to steal somebody's picture because then that's traceable. But you can actually just say, create a new image of a person realistic looking but doesn't exist, and then create a biography realistic but doesn't exist, and do that en mass and practically the only way of Bill

tells that the grammar is too good. Don't give away typho. Come on now, I'm getting waved at because I think we are out of time. I don't we take one very brief last question and let's make it go on? Yes, sir, going, you're right in front of me, go elon. Question for you related to the X platform. Are there simple things we can do, especially when it comes to visual media. You alluded to the fact that it's fairly straightforward and effectively free to make people like yourselves say

and do things that you never said or did. Can we do something like cryptographically signed media. I'm from Adobe, We're working on this project. Twitter was a member. Love to see X come back. Okay, digitally signed media to indicate not only what was created by AI, but what came from a camera, what was real to imbue a sense of trust in media that can go viral. That sounds like a good idea. Actually, so if some way of authenticating would be would be good. So, yeah, that

sounds like a good idea, which we'll probably do it. Yeah, there you go, actually on that on that point. So I've already and this is particularly pertinent for people in my job, right, and I've already had a situation happened to me with adopted image that goes everywhere negative. By the time everyone realizes, well that's fake and we should stop sending it, the

damages the damage is done. And actually we were again reflecting today. If you think next year, you've got elections in you know, I think you know, the US, India, I think Indonesia probably here there you go, massive news. Actually you've got just an enormous junk of the world's population is voting next year, right, and you've got EU elections as well. You know. Actually, just these issues are right in front of ours. Next year is one of big elections across the globe, probably the first set

of elections where this has been a real issue. So figuring out how we manage that is I think kind of mission critical for the people who want, you know, the integrity of our democracy. Yeah, I mean some of it it's quite entertaining, Like the pope and the puffa jacket. Have you seen that one? That's amazing, But I mean I saw ritter people who think that's real. I'm like, well, one of the answer is wearing a puffa jacket and lie, you know, be sweating. But it actually

looks quite quite dashing of things. In fact, I think AI fashion is going to be a real thing. So do in glue like, we live in the most interesting times, and I think this is it is, you know, eight like eighty percent likely to be good and twenty percent bad. I think if we're cognizant and careful about the bad part, on balance,

actually it will be the future that we want. Well for the future that is preferable, and it actually will be some somewhat of a leveler, an equalizer in the sense that you know, every I think everyone will have access to goods and services and education, and so you know, I think probably it leads to more human happiness. So I guess I'd probably leave on an optimistic note. Tough act. Yeah, that's well, that's that is a great note to end on. I think that you know we're all onant that

better future. I think it's there. The promise of it is certainly there. Lots of people in this room, including yourselves, are working hard to make it happen. Our job in government is to make sure happened safely. But on the basis of this conversation in the last couple of days, I'm certainly leaving more confident that we can make that happen. It's been a huge privilege and pleasure to have you here. Thank you very much for having me. I think it's

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