What woke AI’s Godfather in the middle of the night, “I dreamed …”

Nobel Prize winner and AI Pioneer Jeffri hint Last year was awakened in the middle of the night, in which surprising news was that he had won Nobel Prize in PhysicsA recognition that he never expected for his groundbreaking work Nervous system,
Hinton recently told CBS in an interview CBS on Saturday morning, “I dreamed about a win to find out how the brain works. But I didn’t find out how the brain works, but I won one anyway.”
The 77 -year -old researcher, often called “Godfather of AI”, earned a prestigious award for his leading work in the nerve network. His 1986 method became the foundation of today to predict the next word in a sequence. Big language model (Llms).
Jeffri Hinton sees AI as a “tiger cube” that can eventually kill humans
Despite his contribution to the region, Hintan AI has become increasingly concerned about the rapid development of AI. In his CBS interview, he warned that people compared the relationship of humanity with AI to increase a tiger cub compared to AI that can eventually be dangerous.
“The best way to understand it emotionally, we are like someone who has a really cute tiger cub,” Hintan explained. “Until you can ensure that it doesn’t want to kill you when it grows up, you should worry.”
Hinton has estimated the possibility of 10% to 20% that artificial intelligence will eventually take control of humans, such as resonating concerns with industry leaders Google CEO Beautiful Pichai And Openai CEO Sam AltmanHowever, he criticizes these similar companies for prioritizing profits on security and advocating against regulation.
In his Nobel Prize Approved Speech last December, Hintan addressed both AI’s potential benefits and dangers:
He said, “This new form of AI excel in modeling human intuition rather than human logic and it will enable us to make highly intelligent and knowledgeable assistants,” he said. “If the benefits of increased productivity can be shared equally then it will be a wonderful advance for all humanity.”
However, he warned of immediate risks such as divisive eco chambers, government surveillance and cyber attacks, as well as existing threats to make digital beings smarter than humans. “We need immediate research how to prevent these new creatures from controlling,” Hintan warned. “They are no longer science fiction.”