Are Machines Too Dumb to Take Over the World? Part III: Yes.

“Human intelligence is underrated”

Longtime readers of this blog who may have tired of my ruminations about AI imposing absolute reign over humanity should be overjoyed to hear that I am dropping the apocalyptic Artificial Intelligence thread for the foreseeable future.

That’s because this article in New Scientist has put my fears (mostly) to rest, with one of the pioneers of Deep Learning,  Yoshua Bengio,  saying,  “[the machines] don’t even have the intelligence of a 6-month-old.” He is even quoted as saying “AIs are really dumb”—essentially answering my very question. Thanks Yoshua!

Bengio expresses himself in deceptively simple language, but that’s an exercise in humility, because . . .

Bengio is a recipient of the A.M. Turing Award, the “Nobel Prize of computing,” which gives his opinions great authority.  He’s one of the originators of “deep learning,” that combines advanced hardware with state-of-the-art software enabling machines to train themselves to solve problems.  Bengios’s high standing is enough to persuade me not to worry to excess until a contradictory view by an equally qualified AI expert comes out.   Most of those sounding alarms about AI Apocalypse are not computer scientists, no matter how smart they are. Elon Musk, for example, discovered that robots in his Tesla factory were making stupid mistakes, and concluded, “human intelligence is underrated.”

Bengio joins in what has become the majority view among machine-intelligence critics, that for at least the next few decades the greatest danger comes, not from schemes autonomously hatched by  machines, but by evil or misguided people who may use them to nefarious ends. He does not deny the possibility that machines may eventually develop human-level intelligence,* but predicts first it is a  long way off, and secondly there’s little reason to suppose that superintelligent machines will mean us harm.

To quote Bengio from the New Scientist interview:

We are designing those machines, which means the real danger is if an AI gets into the wrong hands, and is then used in ways that will hurt us. It isn’t that the AI is malevolent, it is the humans that are stupid and/or greedy.

We may add, that humans who are neither stupid nor greedy may create a machine that gets out of hand and overperforms some seemingly beneficial task to do much unintended mischief—the lesson of The Sorcerer’s Apprentice.  

=============== footnote ================

* Inventor, futurist, Big Picture Thinker and all-around genius Ray Kurzweil forecasts an arrival of human-level machine intelligence by 2029, following from what he terms the “law of accelerating returns.” Kurzweil, however, is confident that the ascendancy of thinking machines holds far more promise than peril—the promise being a synthesis between machine and human intelligence. For an expansion on this line of Kurzweil’s thinking, check out the following fascinating hour-long presentation from a conference of The Council on Foreign Relations (he talks about the promise-vs-peril beginning about 15:30 into the video):

 

 

 

2 thoughts on “Are Machines Too Dumb to Take Over the World? Part III: Yes.”

  1. Mark,

    Glad to see you coming down to/ back to (?) earth on this. Endowing machines, which have an admittedly astonishing capacity for pattern recognition, high speed search, matching and learning, with consciousness, with the potential ability to take over and rule us malignly, has always struck me as science fantasy of the first order. It is we who design and program them. It is we who make the batteries and the electricity and who possess the plug. In reality, it is we who have all the cards, don’t we? If I am wrong, and we were genuinely threatened, we do have the nuclear option.

    This discussion has always struck me as confusing the machines with their makers. Some of the latter are what we really have to fear.

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