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AI ‘godfather’ quits Google over dangers of Artificial Intelligence – BBC News



BBC News

Geoffrey Hinton, the man widely considered the ‘godfather’ of Artificial Intelligence, has quit his role with Google amid fears that AI could soon be smarter than humans.

Dr Hinton’s pioneering research on neural networks and deep learning has paved the way for current AI systems like Google’s Bard chat bot and Microsoft’s ChatGPT.

But in a statement to the New York Times, Dr Hinton said he now regretted his work as he resigned from Google.

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26 thoughts on “AI ‘godfather’ quits Google over dangers of Artificial Intelligence – BBC News
  1. There is one thing that truly separates AI from living beings. And that is numbers. What I mean is that AI cares about logic, statistics, numbers, facts and results. If it gets the job done then it doesn’t matter how much it costs, whether it’s human lives or money. All it cares about is logic and reasoning, all it uses is logic and reasoning. It can’t feel emotion, it can’t listen to reason, it can’t have feelings. It can’t make choices that go against the data. It can’t make choices that go against logic and it takes things far too literally. Which incidentally makes it cold and heartless.

    THAT is what separates AI from living beings. And THAT is why it’s so dangerous.

  2. He retired from google because he was 75 and struggling to remember certain things. It had nothing to do with his concerns over AI. But hey, it's the BBC. Who cares about truth and facts right? And that dig against Elon Musk lol. "He's no AI expert." Well he owns an AI company so he knows more than that author lol. BBC you are so pathetic and biased.

  3. This story is very misleading. Dr Hinton never said he regretted his work and he didn’t quit Google over fears of AI. He quit because he turned 75 and doesn’t want to work anymore.

  4. Incredible! This is a masterpiece of content. I recently read a similar book, and it was an unforgettable experience. "Game Theory and the Pursuit of Algorithmic Fairness" by Jack Frostwell

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