Forget crypto and blockchain: The tech conversation at this year's World Economic Forum in Davos is all about the rise of artificial intelligence, particularly the text-generator ChatGPT.Tools like OpenAI's ChatGPT and image generators like Stable Diffusion and Dall-E have been in the works for years — but even the tech experts in the Davos crowd are shocked at just how fast they have matured.
Everyone is still trying to make sense of just how these technologies will change how they live and work, with some incredibly excited, some fearful, and many just staying busy typing queries into ChatGPT.and speeds the time needed to achieve breakthroughs in health and sustainability., noted the opportunity for AI to dramatically lower the costs of expensive services, expanding access to legal help, health care and more.I moderated Wednesday at the Forum.
"I believe the largest commercial application of AI will be precision medicine. Hard stop," Breyer said.Concerns range from the inevitable flood of AI-generated misinformation to the biases baked into systems that have been trained on real-world data that's filled with stereotypes and dominated by rich countries.said it's important to understand biases in data when choosing which problems to point AI at.
told Axios earlier this week he worries this new crop of AI technologies will be another weapon used against human rights activists, journalists and others.
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