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Thai central bank hikes rates, but ready to adjust policy
Thai central bank hikes rates, but ready to adjust policy
By Orathai Sriring and Kitiphong Thaichareon BANGKOK (Reuters) -Thailand's central bank raised its key rate by a quarter point on
1970-01-01 08:00
Germany’s Schmid Nears $640 Million Deal With SPAC to Go Public
Germany’s Schmid Nears $640 Million Deal With SPAC to Go Public
Schmid Group, a German provider of advanced electronics manufacturing techniques, is nearing an agreement to go public in
1970-01-01 08:00
Rick Astley does interview in his Pyjamas and jokes he'll rock them on Glasto stage
Rick Astley does interview in his Pyjamas and jokes he'll rock them on Glasto stage
Rick Astley seemingly woke up late for his 'BBC Breakfast' interview or he's not got a problem being seen in his jimmy jams.
1970-01-01 08:00
US Slams Kosovo for New Tensions, Urges Calm From Both Sides
US Slams Kosovo for New Tensions, Urges Calm From Both Sides
The US urged Serbia and Kosovo to immediately de-escalate tensions in northern Kosovo after clashes injured dozens of
1970-01-01 08:00
Karpowership Appeals Saldanha Application Extension Refusal
Karpowership Appeals Saldanha Application Extension Refusal
Karpowership, the Turkish company seeking to install ship-mounted power plants in South African ports, is appealing a decision
1970-01-01 08:00
Texas battery rush: Oil state's power woes fuel energy storage boom
Texas battery rush: Oil state's power woes fuel energy storage boom
By Nichola Groom and Laila Kearney BlackRock, Korea's SK, Switzerland's UBS and other companies are chasing an investment
1970-01-01 08:00
Voices: The real reason companies are warning that AI is as bad as nuclear war
Voices: The real reason companies are warning that AI is as bad as nuclear war
They are 22 words that could terrify those who read them, as brutal in their simplicity as they are general in their meaning: “Mitigating the risk of extinction from AI should be a global priority alongside other societal-scale risks such as pandemics and nuclear war.” That is the statement from San Francisco-based non-profit the Center for AI Safety, and signed by chief executives from Google Deepmind and ChatGPT creators OpenAI, along with other major figures in artificial intelligence research. The fact that the statement has been signed by so many leading AI researchers and companies means that it should be heeded. But it also means that it should be robustly examined: why are they saying this, and why now? The answer might take some of the terror away (though not all of it). Writing a statement like this functions as something like a reverse marketing campaign: our products are so powerful and so new, it says, that they could wipe out the world. Most tech products just promise to change our lives; these ones could end it. And so what looks like a statement about danger is also one that highlights just how much Google, OpenAI and more think they have to offer. Warning that AI could be as terrible as pandemics also has the peculiar effect of making artificial intelligence's dangers seem as if they just arise naturally in the world, like the mutation of a virus. But every dangerous AI is the product of intentional choices by its developers – and in most cases, from the companies that have signed the new statement. Who is the statement for? Who are these companies talking to? After all, they are the ones who are creating the products that might extinguish life on Earth. It reads a little like being hectored by a burglar about your house’s locks not being good enough. None of this is to say that the warning is untrue, or shouldn't be heeded; the danger is very real indeed. But it does mean that we should ask a few more questions of those warning us about it, especially when they are conveniently the companies that created this ostensibly apocalyptic tech in the first place. AI doesn't feel so world-destroying yet. The statement's doomy words might come as some surprise to those who have used the more accessible AI systems, such as ChatGPT. Conversations with that chatbot and others can be funny, surprising, delightful and sometimes scary – but it's hard to see how what is mostly prattle and babble from a smart but stupid chatbot could destroy the world. They also might come as a surprise to those who have read about the many, very important ways that AI is already being used to help save us, not kill us. Only last week, scientists announced that they had used artificial intelligence to find new antibiotics that could kill off superbugs, and that is just the beginning. By focusing on the "risk of extinction" and the "societal-scale risk" posed by AI, however, its proponents are able to shift the focus away from both the weaknesses of actually existing AI and the ethical questions that surround it. The intensity of the statement, the reference to nuclear war and pandemics, make it feel like we are at a point equivalent with cowering in our bomb shelters or in lockdown. They say there are no atheists in foxholes; we might also say there are no ethicists in fallout shelters. If AI is akin to nuclear war, though, we are closer to the formation of the Manhattan Project than we are to the Cold War. We don’t need to be hunkering down as if the danger is here and there is nothing we can do about it but “mitigate it”. There's still time to decide what this technology looks like, how powerful it is and who will be at the sharp end of that power. Statements like this are a reflection of the fact that the systems we have today are a long way from those that we might have tomorrow: the work going on at the companies who warned us about these issues is vast, and could be much more transformative than chatting with a robot. It is all happening in secret, and shrouded in both mystery and marketing buzz, but what we can discern is that we might only be a few years away from systems that are both more powerful and more sinister. Already, the world is struggling to differentiate between fake images and real ones; soon, developments in AI could make it very difficult to find the difference between fake people and real ones. At least according to some in the industry, AI is set to develop at such a pace that it might only be a few years before those warnings are less abstractly worrying and more concretely terrifying. The statement is correct in identifying those risks, and urging work to avoid them. But it is more than a little helpful to the companies that signed it in making those risks seem inevitable and naturally occurring, as if they are not choosing to build and profit from the technology they are so worried about. It is those companies, not artificial intelligence, that have the power to decide what that future looks like – and whether it will include our "extinction". Read More Opinion: Age gap relationships might seem wrong, but they work. Trust me Hands up if you trust Boris Johnson | Tom Peck Boris’s ‘ratty rat’ rage against Sunak could bring the Tories down | John Rentoul Opinion: Age gap relationships might seem wrong, but they work. Trust me Hands up if you trust Boris Johnson | Tom Peck Boris’s ‘ratty rat’ rage against Sunak could bring the Tories down | John Rentoul
1970-01-01 08:00
Deloitte Flags Holes in Adani Ports Deals, Cites Need for Review
Deloitte Flags Holes in Adani Ports Deals, Cites Need for Review
Adani Ports & Special Economic Zone Ltd.’s auditor sounded a note of caution over insufficient disclosures around the
1970-01-01 08:00
George Janko says he's removed himself from Impaulsive's 'toxic environment'
George Janko says he's removed himself from Impaulsive's 'toxic environment'
George Janko has opened up to fans about the “toxic environment” on the Impaulsive podcast amid feud rumours between the hosts. Fans began speculating about a rumoured feud back in April after discovering Janko had unfollowed Logan Paul and Mike Majlak on Instagram. The trio used to host the Impaulsive podcast together before Janko appeared to leave and start his own show following Paul’s on-air debate with him about his Christian faith. In an episode of one of his own podcasts, Janko appeared to hint at some of the reasons he left the trio, joking with guest Tana Mongeau about them starting their own podcast together. Janko joked: “That would be f**king hilarious. But, can you just do me a favour? Put me in a spot where no one looks at me or talks to me, so I feel like how I used to feel.” Sign up to our free Indy100 weekly newsletter Now, the former Impaulsive star has addressed concerned fans, reassuring them that he has moved on from the “toxic environment” of the show. He tweeted: “To the Impaulsive fans, I’m so sorry I can’t speak about things! (NOT MY CHOICE) I do love you guys and for those of you sending me the clip of them talking s**t, it’s all love. I’ve already moved on from that toxic environment.” In the comments, fans speculated further about what exactly is going on with the three, apparently former, friends. “Dang they hit bro with an NDA,” one Twitter user speculated. Another said: “Good for this dude. I watched the Shaq episode and the Bobby Lee episode of Impaulsive and Logan&Mike were mad disrespectful to George.” indy100 has contacted Impaulsive for comment. Have your say in our news democracy. Click the upvote icon at the top of the page to help raise this article through the indy100 rankings.
1970-01-01 08:00
Soros Firm Wrestles With the Scope 3 Conundrum
Soros Firm Wrestles With the Scope 3 Conundrum
Just a piddling 5% of US companies report their Scope 3 greenhouse gas emissions. Unlike those tied directly
1970-01-01 08:00
Japan's Daiwa targets 50% jump in M&A advisory with US focus
Japan's Daiwa targets 50% jump in M&A advisory with US focus
By Makiko Yamazaki TOKYO Japan's Daiwa Securities Group Inc aims to boost annual revenue from the M&A advisory
1970-01-01 08:00
Japan Stocks May Reach Record High in Early 2025, BofA Says
Japan Stocks May Reach Record High in Early 2025, BofA Says
The start of an inflationary regime, coupled with the Tokyo Stock Exchange’s valuation reforms, will boost Japanese stocks
1970-01-01 08:00
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