Google’s Bard artificial intelligence was also discussed in the interview, which aired on CBS’s “60 Minutes” program on Sunday and had a worried tone. Journalist Scott Pelley said he felt uneasy, saying he tried Bard and was “stunned”. Pichai said, “We need to adapt to this as a society” and said that among the jobs that artificial intelligence will disrupt will include “knowledge workers”, including writers, accountants, architects and, ironically, even software engineers.
Artificial intelligence will affect everything
According to Pichai, artificial intelligence “will affect every product in every company.” This effect will not be directly in the way of artificial intelligence taking over the business. Pichai: “For example, you can be a radiologist, if you think five to ten years from now, you have an artificial intelligence collaborating with you. will be. You come in the morning, let’s say you have a hundred things to look into, and he might say, ‘These are the most serious cases you should look for first.'”
Google released a document outlining “recommendations to regulate AI,” but Pichai said society must quickly adapt to regulations that make AI safe for the world, laws and international treaties to punish abuse, and rules “in line with human values, including morality.”
Not the job of a company
However, Pichai said Bard had been hallucinating a lot. Pichai says there’s “a black box” in chatbots, that you “don’t quite understand” why or how certain responses are made. “You don’t quite understand how it works, and yet you unleashed it on society?” Pelley said of this rhetoric. asked. “Let me put it this way, I don’t think we fully understand how the human mind works either,” Pichai replied. For now, the topic of AI seems to be like driving a ship on a foggy day. It’s moving forward somehow, but an iceberg can hit at any time. For this reason, regulatory institutions should shift their priority to this area.