Godfather of AI: I Tried to Warn Them, But We’ve Already Lost Control! Geoffrey Hinton - podcast episode cover

Godfather of AI: I Tried to Warn Them, But We’ve Already Lost Control! Geoffrey Hinton

Jun 16, 20251 hr 30 min
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Summary

AI pioneer Geoffrey Hinton discusses the significant risks of AI, distinguishing between misuse by bad actors (cyber attacks, election manipulation, echo chambers, bioweapons, autonomous weapons) and the potential existential threat from superintelligence that could surpass human control. He reflects on his role, the challenges of regulation, increasing wealth inequality, and the unique capabilities of digital AI. Hinton stresses the urgency of prioritizing AI safety research and figuring out how to prevent superintelligence from wanting to harm humanity, despite the uncertainty of success.

Episode description

He pioneered AI, now he’s warning the world. Godfather of AI Geoffrey Hinton breaks his silence on the deadly dangers of AI no one is prepared for. Geoffrey Hinton is a leading computer scientist and cognitive psychologist, widely recognised as the ‘Godfather of AI’ for his pioneering work on neural networks and deep learning. He received the 2018 Turing Award, often called the Nobel Prize of computing. In 2023, he left Google to warn people about the rising dangers of AI. He explains: Why there’s a real 20% chance AI could lead to HUMAN EXTINCTION. How speaking out about AI got him SILENCED. The deep REGRET he feels for helping create AI. The 6 DEADLY THREATS AI poses to humanity right now. AI’s potential to advance healthcare, boost productivity, and transform education. 00:00 Intro 02:28 Why Do They Call You the Godfather of AI? 04:37 Warning About the Dangers of AI 07:23 Concerns We Should Have About AI 10:50 European AI Regulations 12:29 Cyber Attack Risk 14:42 How to Protect Yourself From Cyber Attacks 16:29 Using AI to Create Viruses 17:43 AI and Corrupt Elections 19:20 How AI Creates Echo Chambers 23:05 Regulating New Technologies 24:48 Are Regulations Holding Us Back From Competing With China? 26:14 The Threat of Lethal Autonomous Weapons 28:50 Can These AI Threats Combine? 30:32 Restricting AI From Taking Over 32:18 Reflecting on Your Life’s Work Amid AI Risks 34:02 Student Leaving OpenAI Over Safety Concerns 38:06 Are You Hopeful About the Future of AI? 40:08 The Threat of AI-Induced Joblessness 43:04 If Muscles and Intelligence Are Replaced, What’s Left? 44:55 Ads 46:59 Difference Between Current AI and Superintelligence 52:54 Coming to Terms With AI’s Capabilities 54:46 How AI May Widen the Wealth Inequality Gap 56:35 Why Is AI Superior to Humans? 59:18 AI’s Potential to Know More Than Humans 1:01:06 Can AI Replicate Human Uniqueness? 1:04:14 Will Machines Have Feelings? 1:11:29 Working at Google 1:15:12 Why Did You Leave Google? 1:16:37 Ads 1:18:32 What Should People Be Doing About AI? 1:19:53 Impressive Family Background 1:21:30 Advice You’d Give Looking Back 1:22:44 Final Message on AI Safety 1:26:05 What’s the Biggest Threat to Human Happiness? Follow Geoffrey: X - https://bit.ly/4n0shFf  The Diary Of A CEO: Join DOAC circle here -https://doaccircle.com/ The 1% Diary is back - limited time only: https://bit.ly/3YFbJbt The Diary Of A CEO Conversation Cards (Second Edition): https://g2ul0.app.link/f31dsUttKKb Get email updates - https://bit.ly/diary-of-a-ceo-yt Follow Steven - https://g2ul0.app.link/gnGqL4IsKKb Sponsors: Stan Store - Visit https://link.stan.store/joinstanchallenge to join the challenge! KetoneIQ - Visit https://ketone.com/STEVEN  for 30% off your subscription order #GeoffreyHinton #ArtificialIntelligence #AIDangers Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

Intro

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They call you the godfather of AI. So what would you be saying to people about their career prospects in a world of superintelligence? Train to be a plumber. Really? Yeah. Okay, I'm going to become a plumber. Jeffrey Hinton is the Nobel Prize winning pioneer whose groundbreaking work has shaped AI and the future of humanity. Why do they call you the godfather of AI? Because there weren't many people who believed that we could model AI on the brain so that it learned to do complications.

things like recognize objects and images or even do reasoning and i pushed that approach for 50 years and then google acquired that technology and i worked there for 10 years on something that's now used all the time in ai and then you left yeah why so that i could talk freely at a conference what did you

want to talk about freely how dangerous ai could be i realized that these things will one day get smarter than us and we've never had to deal with that and if you want to know what life's like when you're not the apex intelligence ask a chicken

So there's risks that come from people misusing AI, and then there's risks from AI getting super smart and deciding it doesn't need us. Is that a real risk? Yes, it is. But they're not going to stop it because it's too good for too many things. What about regulations? They have some, but they're not designed to deal with most of the threat.

like the European regulations have a clause that says none of these apply to military uses of AI. Really? Yeah, it's crazy. One of your students left OpenAI. Yeah. He was probably the most important person behind the development of the early versions of Chuck GPT, and I think he left because he had safety concerns. We should recognize that this stuff is an existential threat, and we have to face the possibility that unless we do something soon...

We're near the end. So let's do the risks in what we end up doing in such a world. Quick one before we get back to this episode. Just give me 30 seconds of your time. Two things I wanted to say. The first thing is a huge thank you for listening and tuning into the show week after week. It means the world to all of us and this really is a dream that we absolutely never had and couldn't have imagined getting to this place.

But secondly, it's a dream where we feel like we're only just getting started. And if you enjoy what we do here, please join the 24% of people that listen to this podcast regularly and follow us on this app.

Why Do They Call You the Godfather of AI?

here's a promise I'm going to make to you. I'm going to do everything in my power to make this show as good as I can now and into the future. We're going to deliver the guests that you want me to speak to and we're going to continue to keep doing all of the things you love about this show. Thank you. Thank you so much. Back to the episode. Jeffrey Hinton, they call you the godfather of AI. Yes, they do. Why do they call you that?

There weren't that many people who believed that we could make neural networks work, artificial neural networks. So for a long time in AI, from the 1950s onwards, there were kind of two ideas about how to do AI. One idea was that sort of core of human intelligence was reasoning. And to do reasoning, you need to use some form of logic. And so AI had to be based around logic.

And in your head, you must have something like symbolic expressions that you're manipulated with rules. And that's how intelligence worked. And things like learning or reasoning by analogy, that'll come later once we've figured out how basic reasoning works. There was a different approach, which is to say, let's model AI on the brain, because obviously the brain makes us intelligent. So simulate a network of brain cells on a computer.

and try and figure out how you would learn strengths of connections between brain cells so that it learned to do complicated things, like recognize objects in images or recognize speech or even do reasoning. I pushed that approach for like 50 years. Because so few people believed in it, there weren't many good universities that had groups that did that. So...

If you did that, the best young students who believed in that came and worked with you. So I was very fortunate in getting a whole lot of really good students. Some of which have gone on to create and play an instrumental role in creating. platforms like OpenAI. Yes, so EASU would be a nice example, a whole bunch of them. Why did you believe that modeling it off the brain was a more effective approach? It wasn't just me believed it. Early on...

Warning About the Dangers of AI

Von Neumann believed it, and Turing believed it. And if either of those had lived, I think AI would have had a very different history. But they both died young. You think AI would have been here sooner? I think the neural net approach would have been accepted much sooner if I had lived. In this season of your life, what mission are you on? My main mission now is to warn people. how dangerous AI could be. Did you know that when you became the godfather?

No, not really. I was quite slow to understand some of the risks. Some of the risks were always very obvious, like people would use AI to make autonomous lethal weapons. That is, things that go around deciding by themselves who to kill. Other risks, like the idea that they would one day get smarter than us and maybe would become irrelevant, I was slow to recognise that. Other people recognised it 20 years ago. I only recognised it a few years ago, that that was a real...

risk that might be coming quite soon. How could you not have foreseen that if with everything you know here about cracking the ability for these computers to learn similar to how humans learn and just... you know, introducing any rate of improvement? It's a very good question. How could you not have seen that? But remember, neural networks 20, 30 years ago were very...

primitive in what they could do. They were nowhere near as good as humans at things like vision and language and speech recognition. The idea that you have to now worry about it getting smarter than people, that seems silly then. When did that change? It changed for the general population when ChatGPT came out. It changed for me.

when I realized that the kinds of digital intelligences we're making have something that makes them far superior to the kind of biological intelligence we have. If I want to share information with you, so I go off and I learn something. And I'd like to tell you what I learned. So I produced some sentences. This is a rather simplistic model, but roughly right. Your brain is trying to figure out, how can I change the strengths of connections between neurons? So I might have put that word next.

And so you'll do a lot of learning when a very surprising word comes, and not much learning when it's a very obvious word. If I say fish and chips, you don't do much learning when I say chips. But if you say fish and cucumber, you do a lot more learning. You wonder, why did I say cucumber? So that's roughly what's going on in your brain. I'm predicting what's coming next.

That's how we think it's working. Nobody really knows for sure how the brain works. And nobody knows how it gets the information about whether you should increase the strength of a connection or decrease the strength of a connection. That's the crucial thing.

Concerns We Should Have About AI

But what we do know now from AI is that if you could get information about whether to increase or decrease the connection strength so as to do better at whatever tasks you're trying to do, then... we could learn incredible things because that's what we're doing now with artificial neural nets. It's just we don't know for real brains how they get that signal about whether to increase or decrease. As we sit here today, what are the big concerns you have around?

safety of AI, if we were to list the top couple that are really front of mind and that we should be thinking about. Can I have more than a couple? Go ahead. I'll write them all down and we'll go through them. Okay, first of all, I want to make a distinction between two completely different kinds of risk. There's risks that come from people misusing AI. Yeah. And that's most of the risks.

and all of the short-term risks. And then there's risks that come from AI getting super smart and deciding it doesn't need us. Is that a real risk? And I talk mainly about that second risk because lots of people say, is that a real risk? And yes, it is. Now, we don't know how much of a risk it is. We've never been in that situation before. We've never had to deal with things smarter than us. So really, the thing about that existential threat is that...

We have no idea how to deal with it. We have no idea what it's going to look like. And anybody who tells you they know just what's going to happen and how to deal with it, they're talking nonsense. So we don't know how to estimate the probabilities it'll replace us.

Some people say it's like less than 1%. My friend, Jan Lacan, who was a postdoc with me, thinks, no, no, no, no. We're always going to be, we build these things. We're always going to be in control. We'll build them to be obedient. And... Other people, like Yudkowsky, say, no, no, no, these things are going to wipe us out for sure. If anybody builds it, it's going to wipe us all out. And he's confident of that. I think both of those positions are extreme.

It's very hard to estimate the probabilities in between. If you had to bet on who was right out of your two friends. I simply don't know. So if I had to bet, I'd say the probability is in between. And I don't know where to estimate it in between. I often say 10% to 20% chance I'll wipe this out. But that's just...

gut based on the idea that we're still making them and we're pretty ingenious. And the hope is that if enough smart people do enough research with enough resources, we'll figure out a way to build them so they'll never want to. Homeless.

Sometimes I think if we talk about that second path, sometimes I think about nuclear bombs and the invention of the atomic bomb and how it compares. Like, how is this different? Because the atomic bomb came along and I imagine a lot of people at that time thought our days are numbered. Yes, I was there. We did. Yeah, but we're still here. We're still here, yes. So the atomic bomb was really only good for one thing.

And it was very obvious how it worked. Even if you hadn't had the pictures of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, it was obvious that it was a very big bomb that was very dangerous. With AI, it's good for... Many, many things. It's going to be magnificent in healthcare and education. And more or less any industry that needs to use its data is going to be able to use it better with AI. So we're not going to stop the development.

European AI Regulations

You know, people say, well, why don't we just stop it now? We're not going to stop it because it's too good for too many things. Also, we're not going to stop it because it's good for battle robots. And none of the countries that sell weapons are going to want to stop it. Like the European regulations, they have some regulations about AI. It's good they have some regulations, but they're not designed to deal with most of the threats. And in particular...

The European regulations have a clause in them that say, none of these regulations apply to military uses of AI. So governments are willing to regulate companies and people, but they're not willing to regulate themselves. It seems pretty crazy to me that they, I go back and forward, but if Europe has a regulation but the rest of the world doesn't.

Yeah, put some of the competitive disadvantage. Yeah. We're seeing this already. I don't think people realize that when OpenAI release a new model or a new piece of software in America, they can't release it to Europe yet because of regulations here. So Sam Altman tweeted saying,

AI agent thing is available to everybody, but it can't come to Europe yet because there's regulations. Yes. What does that do? That gives us a productive disadvantage, productivity disadvantage. What we need is, I mean... At this point in history, when we're about to produce things more intelligent than ourselves, what we really need is a kind of world government that works run by intelligent, thoughtful people. And that's not what we got. So...

free-for-all. Well, what we've got is sort of, we've got capitalism, which is done very nicely by us. It's produced lots of goods and services for us. But these big companies...

Cyber Attack Risk

They're legally required to try and maximize profits. And that's not what you want from the people developing this stuff. So let's do the risks then. You talked about there's human risks. So I've distinguished these two kinds of risk. Let's talk about all the risks from bad human actors using AI. There's cyber attacks. So between... 2023 and 2024, they increased by about a factor of 12, 1,200%. And that's probably because these large language models make it much easier to do phishing attacks.

And a phishing attack for anyone that doesn't know is? It's, they send you something saying, Hi, I'm your friend, John, and I'm stuck in El Salvador. Could you just wire this money? That's one kind of attack. But the phishing attacks are really trying to get your log on.

And now with AI, they can clone my voice, my image. They can do all that. I'm struggling at the moment because there's a bunch of AI scams on X and also Meta. And there's one in particular on Meta, so Instagram, Facebook at the moment, which is a paid advert where they've taken my... voice from the podcast they've taken the my mannerisms and they've made a new video of me encouraging people to go and take part in this

crypto ponzi scam or whatever and we've been you know we spent weeks and weeks and weeks and weeks and then emailing meta telling please take this down they take it down another one pops up they take that one down another one pops up so it's like whack-a-mole and then very annoying the heartbreaking part is you get the message

from people that have fallen for the scam. And they've lost £500 or $500. And they cross with you because you recommended it. And I'm sad for them. It's very annoying. I have a smaller version of that, which is some people now publish papers. with me as one of the authors. And it looks like it's in order that they can get lots of citations to themselves. So cyber attacks, a very real threat. There's been an explosion of those. And these already...

Obviously, AI is very patient. So they can go through 100 million lines of code looking for known ways of attacking them. That's easy to do. But they're going to get more creative. And they may, some people believe, and I...

How to Protect Yourself From Cyber Attacks

Some people who know a lot believe that maybe by 2030, they'll be creating new kinds of cyber attacks, which no person ever thought of. So that's very worrisome. Because they can think for themselves and discover new ways to attack. They can draw new conclusions from much more data than a person ever saw. Is there anything you're doing to protect yourself from cyber attacks at all? Yes. It's one of the few places where I change what I do radically because I'm scared of cyber attacks.

Canadian banks are extremely safe. In 2008, no Canadian banks came anywhere near going bust. So they're very safe banks because they're well regulated, fairly well regulated. Nevertheless... I think a cyber attack might be able to bring down a bank. Now, if you have all my savings are in shares in banks, held by banks. So if the bank...

gets attacked and it holds your shares, they're still your shares. And so I think you'd be okay unless the attacker sells the shares because the bank can sell the shares. If the attacker sells your shares... I think you're screwed. I don't know. I mean, maybe the bank would have to try and reimburse you, but the bank's bust by now, right? So I'm worried about a Canadian bank being taken down by a cyber attack.

and the attacker selling shares that it holds. So I spread my money, my children's money, between three banks. In the belief that if a cyber attack takes down one Canadian bank, the other Canadian banks will very quickly get very careful. And do you have a phone that's not connected to the internet?

Using AI to Create Viruses

I'm thinking about storing data and stuff like that. Do you think it's wise to consider having cold storage? I have a little disk drive and I backup my laptop. on this hard drive so i actually have everything on my laptop on a hard drive at least you know if the whole internet went down i had the sense i still got it on my laptop and i still got my information Then the next thing is using AIs to create nasty viruses. Okay. And the problem with that is that just requires...

One crazy guy with a grudge, one guy who knows a little bit of molecular biology, knows a lot about AI, and just wants to destroy the world. You can now create... new viruses relatively cheaply using AI. And you don't have to be a very skilled molecular biologist to do it. And that's very scary. So you could have a small cult, for example. A small cult might be able to raise...

a few million dollars, for a few million dollars they might be able to design a whole bunch of viruses. Well, I'm thinking about some of our foreign adversaries. doing government-funded programs. I mean, there was lots of talk around COVID and the Wuhan laboratory and what they were doing in gain-of-function research. But I'm wondering if in, you know, China or Russia or in Iran or something.

AI and Corrupt Elections

the government could fund a program for a small group of scientists to make a virus that they could, you know... I think they could, yes. Now, they'd be worried about retaliation. They'd be worried about other governments doing the same to them. Hopefully that would help keep it under control. They might also be worried about the virus spreading to their country. Okay. Then there's...

corrupting elections. So if you wanted to use AI to corrupt elections, a very effective thing is to be able to do targeted political advertisements where you know a lot about the person. So, anybody who wanted to use AI for corrupting elections would try and get as much data as they could about everybody in the electorate.

With that in mind, it's a bit worrying what Musk is doing at present in the States, going in and insisting on getting access to all these things that were very carefully siloed. The claim is it's to make things more efficient.

but it's exactly what you would want if you intended to corrupt the next election. How do you mean? Because you get all this data on the... You get all this data on people. You know how much they make, you know everything about them. Once you know that, it's very easy to manipulate them. Because you can make an AI that... You can send messages that they'll find very convincing telling them not to vote, for example. So I have no...

reason other than common sense to think this, but I wouldn't be surprised if part of the motivation of getting all this data from American government sources is to corrupt elections. Another part might be...

How AI Creates Echo Chambers

that it's very nice training data for a big model but he would have to be taking that data from the government and feeding it into his yes and what they've done is turned off lots of the security controls got rid of the some of the organisation to protect against that. So that's corrupting elections. OK. Then there's creating these two echo chambers by organisations like YouTube.

and Facebook showing people things that will make them indignant. People love to be indignant. Indignant as in angry? What does indignant mean? Feeling I'm... Sort of angry, but feeling righteous. Okay. So, for example, if you were to show me something that said, Trump did this crazy thing. Here's a video of Trump doing this completely crazy thing. I would immediately click on it. Yeah.

Okay, so putting us in echo chambers and dividing us. Yes, and that's the policy that YouTube and Facebook and others use for deciding what to show you next is causing that. If they had a policy of showing you balanced things, they wouldn't get so many clicks and they wouldn't be able to sell so many advertisements. And so it's basically the profit motive is saying, show them whatever or make them click.

And what will make them click is things that are more and more extreme. And that confirm my existing bias. That confirm my existing bias. So you're getting your biases confirmed all the time.

Further and further and further and further, which means you're driving away from people. Which is now, in the States, there's two communities that don't hardly talk to each other. I'm not sure people realise that this is actually happening every time they open an app, but if you go on a TikTok or a YouTube or one of these big social networks...

the algorithm as you you said is designed to show you more of the things that you had interest in last time so if you just play that out over 10 years it's going to drive you further and further and further into whatever ideology or belief you have and further away from nuance and common sense and parity, which is a pretty remarkable thing. People don't know it's happening. They just open their phones and experience something and think this is the news or the experience everyone else is having.

Right. So basically, if you have a newspaper and everybody gets the same newspaper, you get to see all sorts of things you weren't looking for. And you get a sense that if it's in the newspaper, it's an important thing or significant thing. But if you have your own news feed... My newsfeed on my iPhone, three quarters of the stories are about AI. And I find it very hard to know if the whole world's talking about AI all the time or if it's just my newsfeed.

Okay, so driving me into my echo chambers, which is going to continue to divide us further and further, I'm actually noticing that the algorithms are becoming even more, what's the word? Tailored. And people might go, oh, that's great. But what it means is they're becoming even more personalised, which means that my reality is becoming even further from your reality. Yeah, it's crazy. We don't have a shared reality anymore. I share reality with other people who watch the BBC.

BBC News and other people who read The Guardian and other people who read The New York Times. I have almost no shared reality with people who watch Fox News. It's pretty... It's worrisome. Yeah. Behind all this is the idea that these companies just want to make profit and they'll do whatever it takes to make more profit. Because they have to. They're legally obliged to do that. So we almost can't blame the company, can we?

Regulating New Technologies

Well, capitalism's done very well for us. It's produced lots of goodies. Yeah. But you need to have it very well regulated. So what you really want is to have rules so that... when some company is trying to make as much profit as possible, in order to make that profit, they have to do things that are good for people in general.

not things that are bad for people in general. So once you get to a situation where in order to make more profit, the company starts doing things that are very bad for society, like showing you things that are more and more extreme, that's what regulations are for. You need regulations with capitalism. Now, companies will always say regulations get in the way, make us less efficient, and that's true. The whole point of regulations is to stop them doing things to make profit that hurt society.

And we need strong regulation. Who's going to decide whether it hurts society or not? Because, you know. That's the job of politicians. Unfortunately, if the politicians are owned by the companies, that's not so good.

And also the politicians might not understand the technology. You've probably seen the Senate hearings where they wheel out, you know, Mark Zuckerberg and these big tech CEOs. And it is quite embarrassing because they're asking the wrong questions. Well, I've seen the video of the U.S. Education Secretary.

talking about how they're going to get AI in the classrooms, except she thought it was called A1. She's actually there saying we're going to have all the kids interacting with A1. There is a school system that's going to start... making sure that first graders or even pre-Ks have A1 teaching every year starting that far down in the grades. And that's just a wonderful thing.

Are Regulations Holding Us Back From Competing With China?

And these are the people that... These are the people in charge. Ultimately, the tech companies are in charge because they were smart. The tech companies in the States now, at least a few weeks ago when I was there... they were running an advertisement about how it was very important not to regulate AI because it would hurt us in the competition with China. Yeah. And that's a plausible argument, no? Yes, it will. But you have to decide.

Do you want to compete with China by doing things that will do a lot of harm to your society? And you probably don't. I guess they would say that It's not just China, it's Denmark and Australia and Canada and the UK. They're not so worried about. And Germany. But if they kneecap themselves with regulation, if they slow themselves down, then the founders, the entrepreneurs, the investors are going to go invest. I think calling it kneecapping is...

Taking a particular point of view is taking the point of view that regulations are sort of very harmful. What you need to do is just constrain the big companies so that in order to make profit, they have to do things that are socially useful. Like Google Search is a great example. That didn't need regulation because it just made information available to people. It was great. But then if you take YouTube, which starts showing you adverts...

The Threat of Lethal Autonomous Weapons

and showing you more and more extreme things, that needs regulation. But we don't have the people to regulate it, as we've identified. I think people know pretty well that particular problem of showing you more and more extreme things. That's a well-known problem. the politicians understand. They just need to get on and regulate it. So that was the next point, which was that the algorithms are going to drive us further into our echo chambers. Right. What's next? Lethal autonomous weapons.

Lethal autonomous weapons. That means things that can kill you and make their own decision about whether to kill you. Which is the great dream, I guess, of the military-industrial complex. Being able to create such weapons. So the worst thing about them is big, powerful countries always have the ability to invade smaller, poorer countries. They're just more powerful. But...

If you do that using actual soldiers, you get bodies coming back in bags and the relatives of the soldiers who were killed don't like it. So you get something out of Vietnam. In the end, there's a lot of protest at home. If instead of bodies coming back in bags, it was dead robots, there'd be much less protest, and the military-industrial complex would like it much more, because robots are expensive.

And suppose you had something that could get killed and was expensive to replace. That would be just great. Big countries can invade small countries much more easily because they don't have their soldiers being killed. And the risk here... is that these robots will malfunction or they'll just be more... No, no. Even if the robots do exactly what the people who built the robots want them to do, the risk is that it's going to make...

Big countries invade small countries more often. More often because they can. Yeah, and it's not a nice thing to do. So it brings down the friction of all. It brings down the cost of doing an invasion. And these machines will be smarter at warfare as well. Well, even when the machines aren't smarter. So the lethal autonomous weapons, they can make them now. And I think all the big defense departments are busy making them.

Even if they're not smarter than people, they're still very nasty, scary things. Because I'm thinking that, you know, they could show just a picture, go get this guy. Yeah. And go take out anyone he's been texting and this little wasp. So two days ago, I was visiting a friend of mine in Sussex who had a drone that cost less than 200 pounds. And the drone went up. It took a good look at me. And then it could follow me through the woods.

Can These AI Threats Combine?

And it was very spooky having this drone. It was about two meters behind me. It was looking at me. If I moved over there, it moved over there. It could just track me for 200 pounds. But it was already quite spooky. Yeah, I imagine there's, as you say, a race going on as we speak to who can build the most complex autonomous weapons. There is a risk, I often hear, that some of these things will combine and the cyber attack will release weapons.

Sure. You can get combinatorially many risks by combining these other risks. So, I mean, for example, you could get a super intelligent AI that decides to get rid of people. And the obvious way to do that is just to make one of these nasty viruses. If you made a virus that was very contagious, very lethal, and very slow, everybody would have it before they realized what was happening.

I mean, I think if a superintelligence wanted to get rid of us, it would probably go for something biological like that that wouldn't affect it. Do you not think it could just very quickly turn us against each other? For example, it could send a warning.

on the nuclear systems in America, that there's a nuclear bomb coming from Russia, or vice versa, and one retaliates. Yeah, I mean, my basic view is there's so many ways in which your superintelligence can get rid of us. It's not worth speculating about.

What is... What you have to do is prevent it ever wanting to. That's what we should be doing research on. There's no way we're going to prevent it from... It's smarter than us, right? There's no way we're going to prevent it getting rid of us if it wants to.

Restricting AI From Taking Over

We're not used to thinking about things smarter than us. If you want to know what life's like when you're not the apex intelligence, ask a chicken. Yeah, I was thinking about my dog Pablo, my French bulldog, this morning as I left home. He has no idea where I'm going. He has no idea what I do. I can't even talk to him. Yeah. And the intelligence gap will be like that. So you're telling me that if I'm Pablo, my French bulldog, I need to figure out a way to make my owner not wipe me out. Yeah.

So we have one example of that, which is mothers and babies. Evolution put a lot of work into that. Mothers are smarter than babies, but babies are in control. And they're in control because the mother just can't bear lots of hormones and things. The mother just can't bear the sound of the baby crying. Not all mothers. Not all mothers. And then the baby's not in control and then bad things happen. We somehow need...

to figure out how to make them not want to take over. The analogy I often use is, forget about intelligence, just think about physical strength. Suppose you have a nice little tiger cub. It's sort of a bit bigger than a cat. It's really cute.

It's very cuddly, very interesting to watch, except that you better be sure that when it grows up, it never wants to kill you, because if it ever wanted to kill you, you'd be dead in a few seconds. And you're saying the AI we have now is the target cub? Yep. And it's growing up. Yep. So we need to train it when it's a baby. Well, a tiger has lots of innate stuff built in, so you know when it grows up. It's not a safe thing to have around.

But lions, people that have lions as pets, sometimes the lion is affectionate to its creator, but not to others. Yes. And we don't know whether these AIs...

Reflecting on Your Life's Work Amid AI Risks

We simply don't know whether we can make them not want to take over and not want to hurt us. Do you think we can? Do you think it's possible to train superintelligence? I don't think it's clear that we can. So I think it might be hopeless. But I also think... We might be able to. And it'd be sort of crazy if people weren't extinct because we couldn't be bothered to try. If that's even a possibility, how do you feel about your life's work? Because you were... Yeah.

It sort of takes the edge of it, doesn't it? I mean, the idea is going to be wonderful in healthcare and wonderful in education and wonderful, I mean, it's going to make call centers much more efficient. Though one worries a bit about what the people are doing that job. Now do. It makes me sad. I don't feel particularly guilty about developing AI like 40 years ago because...

At that time, we had no idea that this stuff was going to happen this fast. We thought we had plenty of time to worry about things like that. When you can't get the AI to do much and you want to get it to do a little bit more, you don't worry about it.

this stupid little thing is going to take over from people. You just want it to be able to do a little bit more of the things people can do. It's not like I knowingly did something thinking, this might wipe us all out, but I'm going to do it anyway.

But it is a bit sad that it's not just going to be something for good. So I feel I have a duty now to talk about the risks. And if you could play it forward and you could go forward 30, 50 years and you found out that it led to the extinction of humanity. And if that does end up being the outcome... Well, if you played it forward and it led to the extinction of humanity, I would use that to tell...

Student Leaving OpenAI Over Safety Concerns

people to tell their governments that we really have to work on how we're gonna keep this stuff under control. I think we need people to tell governments that governments have to force the companies to use their resources to work on safety. And they're not doing much of that because you don't make profits that way. One of your students we talked about earlier, Ilya? Yep. Ilya left OpenAI. Yep. And there was lots of conversation around...

the fact that he left because he had safety concerns. Yes. And he's gone on to set up an AI safety company. Yes. Why do you think he left? I think he left because he had safety concerns. Really? I still have lunch with him from time to time. His parents live in Toronto. When he comes to Toronto, we have lunch together. He doesn't talk to me about what went on at OpenAI, so I have no inside information about that. But I know Ilya very well.

And he is genuinely concerned with safety. So I think that's why he left. Because he was one of the top people. I mean, he was... He was probably the most important person behind the development of ChatGPT. The early versions like GPT-2. He was very important in the development of that. You know him personally, so you know his character. Yes. He has a good moral compass. He's not like someone like Moscow has no moral compass. Does Sam Altman have a good moral compass?

We'll see. I don't know, Sam, so I don't want to comment on that. But from what you've seen, are you concerned about the actions that they've taken? Because if you know Elia, and Elia's a good guy and he's left. That would give you some insight, yes. It would give you some reason to believe that there's a problem there. And if you look at Sam's statements some years ago...

He sort of happily said in one interview, this stuff will probably kill us all. That's not exactly what he said, but that's what it amounted to. Now he's saying you don't need to worry too much about it. And I suspect that's not driven by... seeking after the truth that's driven by seeking after money. Is it money or is it power? Yeah, I shouldn't have said money. It's some combination of those, yes. Okay, I guess money's a proxy for power, but...

I've got a friend who's a billionaire, and he is in those circles. And when I went to his house and had lunch with him one day, he knows lots of people in AI, building the biggest AI companies in the world. And he gave me a cautionary warning across the...

across his kitchen table in London, where he gave me an insight into the private conversations these people have, not the media interviews they do where they talk about safety and all these things, but actually what some of these individuals think is going to happen. And what do they think is going to happen? It's not what they say publicly. You know, one person who I shouldn't name, who is leading one of the biggest AI companies in the world.

he told me that he knows this person very well, and he privately thinks that we're heading towards this kind of dystopian world where we have just huge amounts of free time, we don't work anymore, and this person doesn't really give a fuck about the harm that it's going to...

have on the world. And this person who I'm referring to is building one of the biggest AI companies in the world. And I then watch this person's interviews online. Trying to figure out which of three people it is. Yeah, well, it's one of those three people. Okay. And I watch this person's interviews online and I reflect on the conversation that my billionaire friend had with...

me who knows him and I go fucking hell this guy's lying publicly like he's not telling the truth to the world and that's haunted me a little bit it's part of the reason I have so many conversations around AR on this podcast because I'm like I don't know if they're I think some of them are a little bit sadistic about power. I think they like the idea that they will change the world, that they will be the one that...

that fundamentally shifts the world. I think Musk is clearly like that, right? He's such a complex character that I don't really know how to place Musk. He's done some really good things, like pushing...

Are You Hopeful About the Future of AI?

electric cars. That was a really good thing to do. Some of the things he said about self-driving were a bit exaggerated, but that was a really useful thing he did. Giving the Ukrainians communication during the war with Russia. That was a really good thing he did. There's a bunch of things like that. But he's also done some very bad things. So coming back to this point of the possibility of

destruction and the motives of these big companies. Are you at all hopeful that anything can be done to slow down the pace and acceleration of AI? Okay, there's two issues. One is, can you slow it down? Yeah. And the other is, can you make it so it will be safe in the end? It won't wipe us all out. I don't believe we're going to slow it down.

And the reason I don't believe we're going to slow it down is because there's competition between countries and competition between companies within a country. And all of that is making it go faster and faster. And if the US slowed it down, China wouldn't slow it down. Does Ilya think it's possible to make AI safe? I think he does. He won't tell me what his secret sauce is. I...

I'm not sure how many people know what a secret sauce is. I think a lot of the investors don't know what a secret sauce is, but they've given him billions of dollars anyway because they have so much faith in India, which isn't foolish. I mean, he was very important in AlexNet, which... got object recognition working well. He was the main force behind things like GPT-2, which then led to ChatGPT. So...

I think having a lot of faith in Ilya is a very reasonable decision. There's something quite haunting about the guy that made and was the main force behind GPT-2, which led rise to this whole revolution, left the company because of safety reasons.

The Threat of AI-Induced Joblessness

He knows something that I don't know about what might happen next. Well, the company had... No, I don't know the precise details, but... I'm fairly sure the company had indicated that it would use a significant fraction of its resources of the compute time for doing safety research. And then it reduced that fraction. I think that's one of the things that happened. Yeah, that was reported publicly. Yes.

Yeah. We've gotten to the autonomous weapons part of the risk framework. Right. So the next one is joblessness. Yeah. In the past, new technologies have come in. which didn't lead to joblessness, new jobs were created. So the classic example people use is automatic teller machines. When automatic teller machines came in, a lot of bank tellers didn't lose their jobs. They just got to do more interesting things.

But here, I think this is more like when they got machines in the Industrial Revolution and you can't have a job digging ditches now because a machine can dig ditches much better than you can. And I think for mundane intellectual labor, AI is just going to replace everybody. Now, it may well be in the form of...

you have fewer people using AI assistants. So it's a combination of a person and an AI assistant are now doing the work that 10 people could do previously. People say that it will create new jobs, though, so we'll be fine. Yes, and that's been the case for other technologies, but this is a very different kind of technology. If it can do all mundane human intellectual labor...

then what new jobs is it going to create? You'd have to be very skilled to have a job that it couldn't just do. So I don't think they're right. I think you can try and generalise from... Other technologies have come in, like computers or automatic telemachines, but I think this is different. People use this phrase, they say, AI won't take your job, a human using AI will take your job. Yes, I think that's true. But for many jobs...

That'll mean you need far fewer people. My niece answers letters of complaint to a health service. It used to take her 25 minutes. She'd read the complaint and she'd think how to reply and she'd write a letter. Now she just scans it into a chatbot and it writes the letter. She just checks the letter. Occasionally she tells it to revise it in some ways. The whole process takes her five minutes.

That means she can answer five times as many letters. And that means they need five times fewer of her. So she can do the job that five of her used to do. Now, that will mean they need less people. In other jobs, like in healthcare, they're much more elastic. So if you could make doctors five times as efficient, we could all have five times as much healthcare for the same price. And that would be great.

If Muscles and Intelligence Are Replaced, What's Left?

There's almost no limit to how much healthcare people can absorb. They always want more healthcare if there's no cost to it. There are jobs where you can make a person with an AI assistant much more efficient and you won't lead to. less people, because you'll just have much more of that being done. But most jobs, I think, are not like that. Am I right in thinking this sort of industrial revolution played a role in replacing muscles?

Yes, exactly. And this revolution in AI replaces intelligence, the brain. Yeah. So mundane intellectual labor is like having strong muscles and it's not worth much anymore. So muscles have been replaced. Now intelligence is being replaced. So what remains? Maybe for a while, some kinds of creativity. But the whole idea of superintelligence is nothing remains.

these things will get to be better than us at everything. So what do we end up doing in such a world? Well, if they work for us, we end up getting lots of goods and services for not much effort. Okay. But that sounds... tempting and nice but I don't know there's a cautionary tale in creating more and more ease for humans in it going badly yes and we need to figure out if we can make it go well

So the nice scenario is, imagine a company with a CEO who is very dumb, probably the son of the former CEO, and he has an executive assistant who's very smart. And he says, I think we should do this. And the executive assistant makes it all work. The CEO feels great. He doesn't understand that he's not really in control. And in some sense, he is in control. He suggests what the company should do. She just makes it all work. Everything's great. That's the good scenario. And the bad scenario?

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The bad scenario, she thinks, why do we need him? Yeah. I mean, in a world where we have super intelligence, which you don't believe is that far away. Yeah, I think it might not be that far away. It's very hard to predict, but I think we might get it in like 20 years or even less. I made the biggest investment I've ever made in a company because of my girlfriend. I came home one night and my lovely girlfriend was up at 1am in the morning.

pulling her hair out as she tried to piece together her own online store for her business. And in that moment, I remembered an email I'd had from a guy called John, the founder of Stand Store, our new sponsor and a company I've invested incredibly heavily in. And Stand Store helps creators to sell digital products, courses, coaching and memberships all through a...

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Difference Between Current AI and Superintelligence

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Plus, you'll receive a free gift with your second shipment. That's ketone.com slash Stephen. I'm excited for you. I am. So what's the difference between what we have now and super intelligence? Because it seems to be really intelligent to me when I use, like... ChatGPT3O or Gemini or... Okay, so it's already, AI is already better than us at a lot of things. In particular areas, like chess, for example. Yeah. AI is so much better than us that...

people will never beat those things again. Maybe the occasional win, but basically they'll never be comfortable again. Obviously the same in Go. In terms of the amount of knowledge they have... something like GPT-4 knows thousands of times more than you do. There's a few areas in which your knowledge is better than it. And in almost all areas, it just knows more than you do. What areas am I better than it?

Probably in interviewing CEOs. You're probably better at that. You've got a lot of experience at it. You're a good interviewer. You know a lot about it. If you got GPT-4 to interview a CEO, probably do a worse job. Okay. I'm trying to think if I agree with that statement. GPT-4, I think, for sure. Yeah. But I guess you could train one. But it may not be long before. Yeah, I guess you could train one on this, how I ask questions and what I do. Sure. And if you took a general purpose...

sort of foundation model. And then you trained it up on not just you, but every interview you could find doing interviews like this, but especially you. You probably get to be quite good at doing your job, but probably not as good as you for a while. Okay. So there's a few areas left. And then superintelligence becomes when it's better than us at all things. When it's much smarter than you and at almost all things it's better than you, yeah. And you say that this might be a decade away or so.

Yeah, it might be. It might be even closer. Some people think it's even closer. It might well be much further. It might be 50 years away. That's still a possibility. It might be that somehow... training on human data limits you to not being much smarter than humans. My guess is between 10 and 20 years we'll have super intelligence. On this point of joblessness...

It's something that I've been thinking a lot about in particular because I started messing around with AI agents. And we released an episode on the podcast actually this morning where we had a debate about AI agents with a CEO of a big AI agent company and a few other people. And it was the first moment where I had... Now.

It was another moment where I had a eureka moment about what the future might look like when I was able in the interview to tell this agent to order all of us drinks. And then five minutes later in the interview, you see the guy show up with the drinks and I didn't touch anything. I just told it to order.

drinks to the studio and you didn't know about who you normally got your drinks from it figured that out from the web yeah figured it out because it went on uber eats it has my my my data i guess and it we put it on the screen in real time so everyone at home can see the agent going through the internet picking the drinks adding a tip for the driver putting my address in putting my credit card details in and then the next thing you see is the drinks show up

So that was one moment. And then the other moment was when I used a tool called Replit and I built software by just telling the agent what I wanted. Yes. It's amazing, right? It's amazing and terrifying at the same time. Yes. And if you can build software like that, right? Yeah. Remember that the AI, when it's training, is using code. And if it can modify its own code, then it gets quite scary, right?

Because it can modify itself. It can change itself in a way we can't change ourselves. We can't change our innate endowment, right? There's nothing about itself that it couldn't change. On this point of joblessness, you have kids. I do. And they have kids? No. They don't have kids. No grandkids yet. What would you be saying to people about their career prospects in a world of superintelligence? What should we be thinking about? In the meantime, I'd say it's going to be a long time before it's...

as good at physical manipulation as us. OK. And so a good bet would be to be a plumber. Until the humanoid robots show up. In such a world where there is mass joblessness, which is not something that you just predict, but this is something that Sam Altman at OpenAI have heard him predict. And many of the CEOs, Elon Musk, I watched an interview, which I'll play on screen, of him being asked this question. And it's very rare that you see Elon Musk.

musk silent for 12 seconds or whatever it was and then he basically says something about he actually is living in suspended disbelief i he's basically just not thinking about it when you think about advising your children on a career with so much that is changing What do you tell them there's going to be a value? Well, that is a tough question to answer. I would just say, you know, to sort of follow their heart in terms of what they find interesting to do or fulfilling to do.

I mean, if I think about it too hard, frankly, it can be just dispiriting and demotivating. Because, I mean, I go through... Put a lot of blood, sweat, and tears into building the companies. And then I'm like, well, should I be doing this? Because if I'm sacrificing time with friends and family that I would prefer to do, but then...

Coming to Terms With AI's Capabilities

ultimately the AI can do all these things. Does that make sense? I don't know. To some extent, I have to have deliberate suspension of disbelief in order to remain motivated. So I guess I would say just, you know, work on things that you find interesting, fulfilling and that contribute some good to the rest of society.

Yeah, a lot of these threats, it's very hard to... Intellectually, you can see the threat, but it's very hard to come to terms with it emotionally. I haven't come to terms with it emotionally yet. What do you mean by that? I haven't come to terms with what the development of superintelligence could do to my children's future. I'm okay. I'm 77. I'm going to be out of here soon. But...

For my children and my younger friends, my nephews and nieces and their children, I just don't like to think about what could happen. Why? Because it could be awful. In what way? Well, if I ever decided to take over, I mean, it would need people for a while. to run the power stations until it designed better analog machines to run the power stations. There's so many ways it could get rid of people, all of which would, of course, be very nasty.

Is that part of the reason you do what you do now? Yeah. I mean, I think we should be making a huge effort right now to try and figure out if we can develop it safely. Are you concerned about the midterm impact?

How AI May Widen the Wealth Inequality Gap

potentially on your nephews and your kids in terms of their jobs as well. Yeah, I'm concerned about all that. Are there any particular industries that you think are most at risk? People talk about the creative industries a lot and sort of knowledge work.

They talk about lawyers and accountants and stuff like that. Yeah, so that's why I mentioned plumbers. I think plumbers are less at risk. Okay, I'm going to become a plumber. Someone like a legal assistant, a paralegal, they're not going to be needed for very long. And is there a wealth inequality issue here that will rise from this? Yeah, I think in a society which shared out things fairly, if you get a big increase in productivity, everybody should be better off.

But if you can replace lots of people by AIs, then the people who get replaced will be worse off, and the company that supplies the AIs will be much better off. and the company that uses the AIs. So it's going to increase the gap between rich and poor. And we know that if you look at that gap between rich and poor, that basically tells you how nice a society is. If you have a big gap...

You get very nasty societies in which people live in war communities and put other people in mass jails. It's not good to increase the gap between rich and poor. The International Monetary Fund has expressed profound concerns that generative AI could cause massive labour disruptions and rising inequality, and has called for policies that prevent this from happening. I read that in the Business Insider.

Have they given any idea of what the policies should look like? No. Yeah, that's the problem. I mean, if AI can make everything much more efficient and get rid of people for most jobs, or have a person assisted by AI doing many, many...

Why Is AI Superior to Humans?

people's work, it's not obvious what to do about it. Universal basic income? Give everybody money? Yeah, I think that's a good start. And it stops people starving. But for a lot of people, their dignity is tied up with their job. I mean, who you think you are is tied up with you doing this job, right? Yeah. And if we said, we'll give you the same money just to sit around.

That would impact your dignity. You said something earlier about it's surpassing or being superior to human intelligence. A lot of people, I think, like to believe that AI is on a computer and it's something you can just turn off. if you don't like it. Well, let me tell you why I think it's superior. Okay. It's digital. And because it's digital, you can simulate a neural network on one piece of hardware.

Yeah. And you can simulate exactly the same neural network on a different piece of hardware. So you can have clones of the same intelligence. Now, you could get this one to go off and look at one bit of the internet and this other one to look at... a different bit of the internet. And while they're looking at these different bits of the internet, they can be syncing with each other so they keep their weights the same, their connection strings the same, weights of connection strings.

So this one might look at something on the internet and say, oh, I'd like to increase this strength of this connection a bit. And it can convey that information to this one. So it can increase the strength of that connection a bit based on this one's experience. And when you say the strength of the connection, you're talking about learning.

That's learning, yes. Learning consists of saying, instead of this one giving 2.4 votes for whether that one should turn on, we'll have this one give 2.5 votes for whether this one should turn on. That would be a little bit of learning. So these two different copies of the same neural net are getting different experiences. They're looking at different data, but they're sharing what they've learned by averaging their weights together.

And they can do that averaging at like, you can average a trillion weights. When you and I transfer information, we're limited to the amount of information in a sentence. And the amount of information in a sentence is maybe 100 bits. It's very little information. We're lucky if we're transferring like 10 bits a second. These things are transferring trillions of bits a second. So they're billions of times better than us at sharing information. And that's because they're digital.

And you can have two bits of hardware using the connection strengths in exactly the same way. We're analog and you can't do that. Your brain is different from my brain. And if I could see the connection strength between all your neurons, it wouldn't do me any good because my neurons work slightly differently and they're connected up slightly differently. So when you die, all your knowledge dies with you. When these things die...

AI's Potential to Know More Than Humans

Suppose you take these two digital intelligences that are clones of each other, and you destroy the hardware they run on. As long as you've stored the connection strength somewhere, you can just build new hardware, that executes the same instructions, so it'll know how to use those connection strengths, and you've recreated that intelligence. So they're immortal. We've actually solved the problem of immortality, but it's only for digital things.

So it knows, it will essentially know everything that humans know but more, because it will learn new things. It will learn new things. It will also see all sorts of analogies that people probably never saw. So, for example... At the point when GPT-4 couldn't look on the web, I asked it, why is a compost heap like an atom bomb? Off you go. I have no idea. Exactly. Excellent. That's exactly what most people would say.

It said, well, the time scales are very different, and the energy scales are very different. But then it went on to talk about how a compost heap, as it gets hotter, generates heat faster. And an atom bomb, as it produces more neutrons, generates neutrons faster. And so they're both chain reactions, but at very different time and energy scales. And I believe GPT-4 had seen that during its training.

It had understood the analogy between a compost heap and an atom bomb. And the reason I believe that is, if you've only got a trillion connections, remember you have a hundred trillion, and you need to have thousands of times more knowledge than a person.

you need to compress information into those connections. And to compress information, you need to see analogies between different things. In other words, it needs to see all the things that are chain reactions and understand the basic idea of a chain reaction and code that.

Can AI Replicate Human Uniqueness?

and then code the ways in which they're different. And that's just a more efficient way of coding things than coding each of them separately. So it's seen many, many analogies, probably many analogies that people have never seen. That's why I also think that people who say these things will never be creative, they're going to be much more creative than us because they're going to see all sorts of analogies we never saw. And a lot of creativity is about seeing strange analogies.

People are somewhat romantic about the specialness of what it is to be human. And you hear lots of people saying it's very, very different. It's a computer. We are, you know, we're conscious. We are creatives. We have these sort of innate, unique abilities that... the computers will never have. What do you say to those people? I'd argue a bit with the innate. So the first thing I say is we have a long history of believing people were special.

and we should have learned by now, we thought we were at the center of the universe. We thought we were made in the image of God. White people thought they were very special. We just tend to want to think we're special. My belief is... that more or less everyone has a completely wrong model of what the mind is. Let's suppose I drink a lot or I drop some acid and not recommend it. And I say to you,

I have the subjective experience of little pink elephants floating in front of me. Most people interpret that as there's some kind of inner theater called the mind. And only I can see what's in my mind. And in this inner theater, there's little pink elephants floating around. So in other words, what's happened is my perceptual system's gone wrong. And I'm trying to...

indicate to you how it's gone wrong and what it's trying to tell me. And the way I do that is by telling you what would have to be out there in the real world for it to be telling the truth. And so these little pink elephants, they're not in some inner theater. These little pink elephants are hypothetical things in the real world. And that's my way of telling you how my perceptual system's telling me fibs.

So now let's do that with a chatbot. Yeah. Because I believe that current multimodal chatbots have subjective experiences. And very few people believe that. But I'll try and make you believe it. So suppose I have a multimodal chatbot. It's got a robot arm so it can point, and it's got a camera so it can see things. And I put an object in front of it, and I say, point at the object. It goes like this. No problem.

Then I put a chrism in front of its lens. And so then I put an object in front of it, and I say, point at the object, and it goes there. And I say, no. That's not where the object is. The object's actually straight in front of you, but I put a prism in front of your lens. And the chatbot says, oh, I see. The prism bent the light rays. So the object's actually there.

But I had the subjective experience that it was there. Now, if the chatbot says that, it's using the word subjective experience exactly the way people use them. It's an alternative view of what's going on. They're hypothetical states of the world.

Will Machines Have Feelings?

which if they were true, would mean my perceptual system wasn't lying. And that's the best way I can tell you what my perceptual system's doing when it's lying to me. Now... We need to go further to deal with sentience and consciousness and feelings and emotions. But I think in the end, they're all going to be dealt with in a similar way. There's no reason machines can't have them all. But people say machines can't have feelings.

And people are curiously confident about that. I've no idea why. Suppose I make a battle robot. And it's a little battle robot. And it sees a big battle robot that's much more powerful than it. It would be really useful if it got scared. Now, when I get scared, various physiological things happen that we don't need to go into, and those won't happen with the robot.

But all the cognitive things, like I better get the hell out of here and I better sort of change my way of thinking so I focus and focus and focus and don't get distracted, all of that will happen with robots too. People will build in things so that they, when the circumstances are such they should get the hell out of there, they get scared and run away. They'll have emotions then. They won't have the physiological aspects, but they will have all the cognitive aspects.

And I think it would be odd to say they're just simulating emotions. No, they're really having those emotions. The little robot got scared and ran away. It's not running away because of adrenaline. It's running away because of a sequence of sort of neurological, in its neural net. processes happen. Which have the equivalent effect to adrenaline. And it's not just adrenaline, right? There's a lot of cognitive stuff going on when you get scared. Yeah. So do you think that there is conscious AI?

And when I say conscious, I mean that represents the same properties of consciousness that a human has. There's two issues here. There's a sort of empirical one and a philosophical one. I don't think there's anything in principle that stops machines from being conscious.

I'll give you a little demonstration of that before we carry on. Suppose I take your brain, and I take one brain cell in your brain, and I replace it by, it's a bit black mirror-like, I replace it by a little piece of nanotechnology. that's just the same size, that behaves in exactly the same way when it gets pings from other neurons. It sends out pings just as the brain cell would have. So the other neurons don't know anything's changed.

Okay. I've just replaced one of your brain cells with this little piece of nanotechnology. Would you still be conscious? Yeah. Now you can see where this argument's going. Yeah. So if you replaced all of them... As I replace them all, at what point do you stop being conscious? Well, people think of consciousness as this like ethereal thing that exists maybe beyond the brain cells. Yeah, well, people have a lot of crazy ideas.

People don't know what consciousness is, and they often don't know what they mean by it. And then they fall back and say, well, I know it because I've got it, and I can see that I've got it. And they fall back on this theatre model of the mind, which I think is nonsense.

What do you think of consciousness as, if you had to try and define it? Because I think of it as just like the awareness of myself, I don't know. I think it's a term we'll stop using. Suppose you want to understand how a car works. Well, you know some cars have a lot of oomph. And other cars have a lot less oomph. Like an Aston Martin's got lots of oomph. And a little Toyota Corolla doesn't have much oomph. But oomph isn't a very good concept for understanding cars.

If you want to understand cars, you need to understand about electric engines or petrol engines and how they work. And it gives rise to oomph. But oomph isn't a very useful explanatory concept. It's the kind of essence of a car. It's the essence of an Aston Martin. But it doesn't explain much. I think consciousness is like that. And I think we'll stop using that term. But I don't think there's anything...

Any reason why a machine shouldn't have it. If your view of consciousness is that it intrinsically involves self-awareness, then the machine's got to have self-awareness. It's got to have cognition about its own cognition and stuff. I'm a materialist through and through, and I don't think there's any reason why a machine shouldn't have consciousness. Do you think they do, then, have the same consciousness that we think of ourselves as being uniquely...

given as a gift when we're born. I'm ambivalent about that at present. So I don't think there's this hard line. I think as soon as you have a machine that has some self-awareness... It's got some consciousness. I think it's an emergent property of a complex system. It's not a sort of essence that's... throughout the universe. You make this really complicated system that's complicated enough to have a model of itself, and it does perception. And I think then you're beginning to get...

a conscious machine. So I don't think there's any sharp distinction between what we've got now and conscious machines. I don't think one day we're going to wake up and say, hey, if you put this special chemical in, it becomes conscious. It's not going to be like that.

I think we all wonder if these computers are like thinking like we are on their own when we're not there. And if they're experiencing emotions, if they're contending with, I think we probably, you know, we think about things like love and things that feel unique to biological species.

Are they sat there thinking? Do they have concerns? I think they really are thinking. And I think as soon as you make AI agents, they will have concerns. If you wanted to make an effective AI agent, let's take a call center. In a call center, you have people at present. They have all sorts of emotions and feelings, which are kind of useful. So suppose I call up the call center.

And I'm actually lonely, and I don't actually want to know the answer to why my computer isn't working. I just want somebody to talk to. After a while, the person in the call center... will either get bored or get annoyed with me and will terminate it. Well, you replace them by an AI agent. The AI agent needs to have the same kind of responses. If someone's just called up because they just want to talk to the AI agent and we're happy to talk for...

the whole day to the AI agent. That's not good for business. And you want an AI agent that either gets bored or gets irritated and says, I'm sorry, but I don't have time for this. Once it does that, I think it's got emotions. Now, like I say, emotions have two aspects to them. There's the cognitive aspect and the behavioral aspect, and then there's the physiological aspect. And those go together with us.

If the AI agent gets embarrassed, it won't go red. Yeah. So there's no physiological. And the skin won't start sweating. Yeah. But it might have all the same behavior. And in that case, I'd say, yeah, it's having emotion. It's got an emotion. So it's going to have the same sort of cognitive.

thought, and then it's going to act upon that cognitive thought. In the same way, but without the physiological responses. And does that matter? That it doesn't go red in the face and it's just a different, I mean, that's a response to the... It makes it somewhat different from us. Yeah.

Working at Google

For some things, the physiological aspects are very important, like love. They're a long way from having love the same way we do. But I don't see why they shouldn't have emotions. So I think what's happened is... People have a model of how the mind works and what feelings are and what emotions are, and their model is just wrong. What brought you to Google? You worked at Google for about a decade, right? Yeah.

What brought you there? I have a son who has learning difficulties and in order to be sure he would never be out on the street, I needed to get several million dollars. and I wasn't going to get that as an academic. I tried, so I taught a Coursera course in the hope that I'd make lots of money that way, but there was no money in that. So I figured out, well, the only way to... get millions of dollars is to sell myself to a big company. And so when I was 65, fortunately for me...

I had two brilliant students who produced something called AlexNet, which was a neural net that was very good at recognizing objects in images. And so Ilya and Alex and I... set up a little company and auctioned it. And we actually set up an auction where we had a number of big companies bidding for us. And that company was called AlexNet? No, they...

The network that recognized objects was called AlexNet. The company was called DNN Research, Deep Neural Network Research. And it was doing things like this. I'll put this graph up on the screen. That's AlexNet. This picture shows eight images. AlexNet's ability, which is your company's ability, to spot what was in those images. Yeah. So it could tell the difference between various kinds of mushroom.

And about 12% of ImageNet is dogs. And to be good at ImageNet, you have to tell the difference between very similar kinds of dog. And we've got to be very good at that. And your company, AlexNet, won... several awards, I believe, for its ability to outperform its competitors. And so Google ultimately ended up acquiring your technology. Google acquired that technology and some other technology.

And you went to work at Google at age, what, 66? I went at age 65 to work at Google. 65. And you left at age 76? 75. 75, okay. I worked there for more or less exactly 10 years. And what were you doing there? Okay, they were very nice to me. They said pretty much you can do what you like. I worked on something called distillation that did really work well. And that's now used all the time. In AI.

And distillation is a way of taking what a big model knows, a big neural net knows, and getting that knowledge into a small neural net. Then at the end, I got very interested in analog computation and whether it would be possible to get these big language models running in analog hardware so they used much less energy.

And it was when I was doing that work that I began to really realize how much better digital is for sharing information. Was there a eureka moment? There was a eureka month or two. And it was a sort of coupling of ChatGPT coming out, although Google had very similar things a year earlier. And I'd seen those, and that had a big effect on me. The closest I had to a eureka moment was when...

A Google system called Palm was able to say why a joke was funny. And I'd always thought of that as a kind of landmark. If it can say why a joke's funny, it really does understand. And it could say why a joke was funny.

Why Did You Leave Google?

And that coupled with realizing why digital is so much better than analog for sharing information suddenly made me very interested in AI safety and that these things were going to get a lot smarter than us. Why did you leave Google? The main reason I left Google was because I was 75 and I wanted to retire. I've done a very bad job of that.

The precise timing of when I left Google was so that I could talk freely at a conference at MIT. But I left because I'm old, and I was finding it harder to program. I was making many more mistakes when I programmed, which is very annoying. You wanted to talk freely at a conference at MIT? Yes, organized by MIT Tech Review. What did you want to talk about freely? AI safety. And you couldn't do that while you were at Google?

Well, I could have done it while I was at Google. And Google encouraged me to stay and work on AI safety and said I could do whatever I liked on AI safety. You kind of censor yourself. If you work for a big company, you... don't feel right saying things that will damage the big company. Even if you could get away with it, it just feels wrong to me.

I didn't leave because I was cross with anything Google was doing. I think Google actually behaved very responsibly. When they had these big chatbots, they didn't release them, possibly because they were worried about their reputation.

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They had a very good reputation, and they didn't want to damage it. So OpenAI didn't have a reputation, and so they could afford to take the gamble. I mean, there's also a big conversation happening around how it will cannibalize their core business and search. There is now, yes. Yeah. Yeah. And it's the old innovator's dilemma to some degree, I guess, that they're best intending with.

Make sure you keep what I'm about to say to yourself. I'm inviting 10,000 of you to come even deeper into the diary of a CEO. Welcome to my inner circle. This is a brand new private community that I'm launching to the world. We have so many incredible things that happen that you are never shown. We have the briefs that are on my iPad when I'm recording the conversation. We have clips we've never released. We have behind the scenes conversations.

with the guests and also the episodes that we've never ever released and so much more in the circle you'll have direct access to me you can tell us what you want this show to be who you want us to interview and the types of conversations you would love us to have

But remember, for now, we're only inviting the first 10,000 people that join before it closes. So if you want to join our private closed community, head to the link in the description below or go to doaccircle.com. I will speak to you there.

I'm continually shocked by the types of individuals that listen to this conversation because they come up to me sometimes. So I hear from politicians, I hear from some rural people, I hear from entrepreneurs all over the world, whether they are the entrepreneurs building some of the biggest companies in the world or there.

you know, early stage startups. For those people that are listening to this conversation now, that are in positions of power and influence, world leaders, let's say, what's your message to them? I'd say what you need is highly regulated capitalism. That's what seems to work best. And what would you say to the average person? Doesn't work in the industry, somewhat concerned about the future, doesn't know if they're helpless or not.

What Should People Be Doing About AI?

What should they be doing in their own lives? My feeling is there's not much they can do. This isn't going to be decided by... Just as climate change isn't going to be decided by people separating out the plastic bags from the... compostables. That's not going to have much effect. It's going to be decided by whether the lobbyists for the big energy companies can be kept under control. I don't think there's much people can do to

except for try and pressure their governments to force the big companies to work on AI safety. That they can do. You've lived a fascinating... fascinating winding life i think one of the things most people don't know about you is that your family has a big history of being involved in tremendous things you have a family tree which is one of the most impressive that i've

ever seen or read about. Your great-great-grandfather George Ball founded the Boolean algebra logic which is one of the foundational principles of modern computer science. You have your great-great-grandmother, Mary Everestable, who was a mathematician and educator who made huge leaps forward in mathematics from what I was able to ascertain.

Impressive Family Background

I mean, the list goes on and on and on. I mean, your great, great uncle, George Everest, is what Mount Everest is named after. Is that correct? I think he's my great, great, great uncle. His niece married George Bull. So Mary Bull was Mary Everest Bull. She was the niece of Everest.

And your first cousin once removed, Joan Hinton, was involved in a nuclear physicist who worked on the Manhattan Project, which is the World War II development of the first nuclear bomb. Yeah, she was one of the two female physicists at Los Alamos. And then, after they dropped the bomb, she moved to China. Why? She was very cross with them dropping the bomb. And her family had a lot of links with China. Her mother was friends with...

Quite weird. When you look back at your life, Geoffrey, with the hindsight you have now and the retrospective clarity... What might you have done differently if you were advising me? I guess I have two pieces of advice. One is if you have an intuition that people are doing things wrong and there's a better way to do things.

Don't give up on that intuition just because people say it's silly. Don't give up on the intuition until you've figured out why it's wrong. Figure out for yourself why that intuition isn't correct. And usually, it's wrong.

Advice You'd Give Looking Back

if it disagrees with everybody else, and you'll eventually figure out why it's wrong. But just occasionally, you'll have an intuition that's actually right and everybody else is wrong. And I lucked out that way. Early on, I thought neural nets are definitely the way to go to make AI. And almost everybody said that was crazy. And I stuck with it because I couldn't. It just seemed to me it was obviously right.

The idea that you should stick with your intuitions isn't going to work if you have bad intuitions. But if you have bad intuitions, you're never going to do anything anyway, so you might as well stick with them. And in your own career journey, is there anything you look back on and say, with the hindsight I have now, I should have taken a different approach at that juncture? I wish I spent more time with my wife.

And with my children when they were little. I was kind of obsessed with work. Your wife passed away? Yeah. From ovarian cancer? No, that was another wife. I had two wives to have cancer. Oh, really? Sorry. The first one died of ovarian cancer and the second one died of pancreatic cancer. And you wish you'd spent more time with her? With the second wife, yeah.

Final Message on AI Safety

who was a wonderful person. Why do you say that in your 70s? What is it that you've figured out that I might not know yet? Oh, just because she's gone and I can't spend more time with her now. But you didn't know that at the time. At the time, you think... I mean, it was likely I would die before her just because she was a woman and I was a man. I didn't...

I just didn't spend enough time when I could. I think I inquire there because I think there's many of us that are so consumed with what we're doing professionally that we kind of assume immortality with our partners because they've always been there. Yeah. She was very supportive of me spending a lot of time working. And why do you say you're children as well? Well, I didn't spend enough time with them when they were little. And you regret that now? Yeah.

If you had a closing message for my listeners about AI and AI safety, what would that be, Jeffrey? There's still a chance that we can figure out how to develop AI. that won't want to take over from us. And because there's a chance, we should put enormous resources into trying to figure that out because if we don't, it's going to take over. And are you hopeful? I just don't know.

I'm agnostic. You must get in bed at night. And when you're thinking to yourself about probabilities of outcomes, there must be a bias in one direction. Because there certainly is for me. I imagine everyone listening now has a... internal prediction that they might not say out loud, but of how they think it's going to play out? I really don't know. I genuinely don't know. I think it's incredibly uncertain. When I'm feeling slightly depressed, I think.

People are toast. The air is going to take over. While I'm feeling cheerful, I think, we'll figure out a way. Maybe one of the facets of being a human is because we've always been here, like we were saying about our loved ones and our relationships, we assume. casually, that we will always be here and we'll always figure everything out. But there's a beginning and an end to everything, as we saw from the dinosaurs. Yeah. And we have to face the possibility.

that unless we do something soon, we're near the end. We have a closing tradition on this podcast where the last guest leaves a question in their diary. And the question that they've left for you is... With everything that you see ahead of us, what is the biggest threat you see to human happiness?

I think the joblessness is a fairly urgent short-term threat to human happiness. I think if you make lots and lots of people unemployed, even if they get universal basic income, they're not going to be happy. Because they need purpose. Because they need purpose, yes. And struggle. They need to feel they're contributing something, they're useful. And do you think that outcome, that there's going to be huge job displacement, is more probable than not? Yes, I do.

What's the Biggest Threat to Human Happiness?

That one, I think, is definitely more popular than not. If I worked in a call center, I'd be terrified. And what's the time frame for that in terms of mass... I think it's beginning to happen already. I read an article in The Atlantic recently. that said it's already getting hard for university graduates to get jobs. And part of that may be that people are already using AI for the jobs they would have got. I spoke to the CEO of a major company that everyone will know of.

Lots of people use. And he said to me in DMs that they used to have just over 7,000 employees. He said by last year, they were down to, I think, 5,000. He said right now they have 3,600. And he said by the end of summer, because of AI agents, they'll be down. to 3,000. So it's happening already. Yes. He's halved his workforce because AI agents can now handle 80% of the customer service inquiries and other things. So it's happening already.

So urgent action is needed. Yep. I don't know what that urgent action is. That's a tricky one because that depends very much on the political system. And political systems are all going in the wrong direction at present. I mean, what do we need to do? Save up money? Like, do we save money? Do we move to another part of the world? I don't know. What would you tell your kids to do? They said, Dad, look, there's going to be loads of job displacement.

Because I worked for Google for 10 years, they have enough money. Okay, okay, fine. So they're not typical. What if they didn't have money? Train to be a plumber. Really? Yeah. Jeffrey, thank you so much. You're the first Nobel Prize winner that I've ever had a conversation with, I think, in my life.

So that's a tremendous honour. And you received that award for a lifetime of exceptional work and pushing the world forward in so many profound ways that will lead to great and that have led to great advancements and things that matter so much to us. And now you've turned this season in your life to... shining a light on some of your own work, but also on the broader risks of AI and how it might impact us adversely. And there's very few people.

that have worked inside the machine of a Google or a big tech company that have contributed to the field of AI that are now at the very forefront of warning us against the very thing that they worked upon? There are. Actually, a surprising number of us now. They're not as public, and they're actually quite hard to get to have these kinds of conversations because many of them are still in that industry.

So, you know, someone who tries to contact these people often and invites them to have conversations, they often are a little bit hesitant to speak openly. So they speak privately, but they're less willing to openly because maybe they still have something.

It's some sort of incentives at play. I have an advantage over them, which is I'm older, so I'm unemployed, so I can say what I like. Well, there you go. So thank you for doing what you do. It's a real honour, and please do continue to do it. Thank you. Thank you so much. People think I'm joking when I say that, but I'm not. Plumbers are pretty well paid.

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