Yann LeCun: Current AI systems are yet to reach dog-level intelligence: Meta AI chief – Times of India
“Those systems are still very limited, they don’t have any understanding of the underlying reality of the real world, because they are purely trained on text, massive amount of text,” CNBC quoted LeCun, who was speaking at the Viva Tech conference currently underway in Paris, France.
“Most of human knowledge has nothing to do with language … so that part of the human experience is not captured by AI,” he added.LeCun highlighted that AI systems can pass the Bar examination required for someone to become an attorney but However, can’t load a dishwasher, which a 10-year-old could “learn in 10 minutes.”
“What it tells you [that] we are missing something really big … to reach not just human-level intelligence, but even dog intelligence,” LeCun noted.
The Meta executive also said the social media company is working on training AI on video — a relatively tougher task.
Risks of AI technology
Some experts and famous people have argued that AI technology poses dangers to humanity. Earlier this year, Tesla CEO Elon Musk said that AI is “one of the biggest risks to the future of civilization.”
According to the report, Jacques Attali, a French economic and social theorist who writes about technology, was also speaking at the conference. He said that AI being good or bad depends on its use.
“If you use AI to develop more fossil fuels, it will be terrible. If you use AI [to] develop more terrible weapons, it will be terrible,” he was quoted as saying.
“On the contrary, AI can be amazing for health, amazing for education, amazing for culture,” he added.
Speaking on whether robots will take over humans, Attali said, “It is well-known mankind is facing many dangers in the next three or four decades.”
He pointed out that apart from climate disasters and war, he is worried that robots “will turn against us.”
LeCun, however, said that even though machines will become more intelligent in future, they should not be seen as a danger.
“We should not see this as a threat, we should see this as something very beneficial. Every one of us will have an AI assistant … it will be like a staff to assist you in your daily life that is smarter than yourself,” LeCun said.
He added that the fear that “if robots are smarter than us, they are going to want to take over the world” has been popularised by science fiction and that “there is no correlation between being smart and wanting to take over.”
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