Described as the “father of artificial intelligence”, Hinton is referred to by some as the father of artificial intelligence. His work in this area began in the early 70’s when he was a graduate student at Edinburgh University, where he became interested in the idea of neural networks. Few researchers at the time believed the concept was valuable, but Hinton made it his life’s work. Hinton, a professor in 2012, and two of his students created a groundbreaking neural network that can analyze images and identify elements in photographs. The following year, Google bought Hinton’s company, DNNresearch, for $44 million. Google also placed Hinton at the head of the program so that he could continue his work.
Reality is fading
Hinton, until recently, thought that Google was displaying a responsible bit of work by not releasing a potentially harmful system. However, at this point, ideas and practices have changed. ChatGPT and Microsoft’s investments in OpenAI caused Google to join the accelerating race and hastily launch immature Bard AI.
The dreaded moment has come
Hinton said in a statement that only a few people believed in the idea that artificial intelligence could be smarter than humans. Frankly, I don’t think so anymore.” As of now, Hinton states that he regrets what he has done, but consoles him by saying “if I hadn’t done it, someone else would have done it”.
Frankly, what Hinton said and his concerns were not fictitious. These are the facts we have seen in the last 6 months. The images produced by artificial intelligence are considered real, the sounds produced by artificial intelligence are indistinguishable from the original, and artificial intelligence successfully passes the most difficult exams are only the first examples that come to mind. Now the competition has accelerated and artificial intelligence technologies continue to grow exponentially day by day.