HomeNewsTechnologyDangers of AI: What are the Artificial Intelligence threats and risks?

Dangers of AI: What are the Artificial Intelligence threats and risks?

Hailed as revolutionary and a game-changer, AI has drawbacks. In addition to planning for superintelligent computers, contemporary AI can create problems. Let's take a look at some crucial AI-related risks.

May 14, 2023 / 20:43 IST
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Representational image. (Photo via Unsplash/Getty Images)
Representational image. (Photo via Unsplash/Getty Images)

Artificial Intelligence (AI) is evolving quicker than any of us could have predicted. Experts in the field of technology have repeatedly stated that advancements in AI are occurring at a rapid rate and that things expected to happen years later are already occurring. Some experts believe that the rapid development of AI is beneficial and will facilitate our learning and adaptation. However, others warn about the dangers of AI and assert that the world may not be ready for it yet.

Ray Kurzweil had said, "Artificial Intelligence will reach human levels by around 2029. Follow that out further to, say, 2045, and we will have multiplied the intelligence, the human biological machine intelligence of our civilisation a billion-fold."

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Recently, former Google executive and AI pioneer Geoffrey Hinton said he felt compelled to "blow the whistle" on the dangers of AI since the technology he helped create is developing intelligence beyond his wildest dreams.

Similarly, Elon Musk, CEO of Tesla, has long been an outspoken critic of AI. He reiterated his concern that even "benign dependency" on these powerful machines poses a threat to human civilisation. Musk believed that overreliance on AI for even ordinary tasks could force people to recall how to operate the equipment that made AI possible. Likewise, the CEO of Google said that the risks associated with the development of AI "keep me up at night." In response to concerns about the technology's effects on jobs, privacy, and how information is shared online, Sundar Pichai stated that it "can be very harmful if deployed wrong" and supported mounting calls for regulation.