"For half a century, Geoffrey Hinton
nurtured the technology at the heart of chatbots like ChatGPT. Now he worries
it will cause serious harm.
Geoffrey Hinton was an artificial
intelligence pioneer. In 2012, Dr. Hinton and two of his graduate students at
the University of Toronto created technology that became the
intellectual foundation for the A.I. systems that the tech industry’s biggest
companies believe is a key to their future.
On Monday, however, he officially
joined a growing chorus of critics who say those companies are racing toward danger
with their aggressive campaign to create products based on generative
artificial intelligence, the technology that powers popular chatbots like
ChatGPT.
Dr. Hinton said he has quit his job
at Google, where he has worked for more than a decade and became one of the
most respected voices in the field, so he can freely speak out about the risks
of A.I. A part of him, he said, now regrets his life’s work.
“I console myself with the normal
excuse: If I hadn’t done it, somebody else would have,” Dr. Hinton said during
a lengthy interview last week in the dining room of his home in Toronto, a
short walk from where he and his students made their breakthrough.
Dr. Hinton’s journey from A.I.
groundbreaker to doomsayer marks a remarkable moment for the technology
industry at perhaps its most important inflection point in decades. Industry
leaders believe the new A.I. systems could be as important as the introduction
of the web browser in the early 1990s and could lead to breakthroughs in areas
ranging from drug research to education.
But gnawing at many industry
insiders is a fear that they are releasing something dangerous into the wild.
Generative A.I. can already be a tool for misinformation. Soon, it could be a
risk to jobs. Somewhere down the line, tech’s biggest worriers say, it could be
a risk to humanity.
“It is hard to see how you can prevent the bad actors from
using it for bad things,” Dr. Hinton said.
After the San Francisco start-up
OpenAI released a new version of ChatGPT in March,
more than 1,000 technology leaders and researchers signed an open letter calling for
a six-month moratorium on the development of new systems because A.I.
technologies pose “profound risks to society and humanity.”
Several days later, 19 current and
former leaders of the Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence,
a 40-year-old academic society, released their own letter warning
of the risks of A.I. That group included Eric Horvitz, chief scientific officer
at Microsoft, which has deployed OpenAI’s technology across a wide range of
products, including its Bing search engine.
Dr. Hinton, often called “the
Godfather of A.I.,” did not sign either of those letters and said he did not
want to publicly criticize Google or other companies until he had quit his job.
He notified the company last month that he was resigning, and on Thursday, he
talked by phone with Sundar Pichai, the chief executive of Google’s parent
company, Alphabet. He declined to publicly discuss the details of his
conversation with Mr. Pichai.
Google’s chief scientist, Jeff Dean,
said in a statement: “We remain committed to a responsible approach to A.I. We’re
continually learning to understand emerging risks while also innovating
boldly.”
Dr. Hinton, a 75-year-old British
expatriate, is a lifelong academic whose career was driven by his personal
convictions about the development and use of A.I. In 1972, as a graduate
student at the University of Edinburgh, Dr. Hinton embraced an idea called a
neural network.
A neural network is a mathematical
system that learns skills by analyzing data. At the time, few researchers
believed in the idea. But it became his life’s work.
In the 1980s, Dr. Hinton was a professor of computer science
at Carnegie Mellon University, but left the university for Canada because he
said he was reluctant to take Pentagon funding. At the time, most A.I. research
in the United States was funded by the Defense Department. Dr. Hinton is deeply
opposed to the use of artificial intelligence on the battlefield — what he
calls “robot soldiers.”
In 2012, Dr. Hinton and two of his students in Toronto, Ilya
Sutskever and Alex Krishevsky, built a neural network that could analyze
thousands of photos and teach itself to identify common objects, such as
flowers, dogs and cars.
Google spent $44 million
to acquire a company started by Dr. Hinton and his two students. And their system led to the creation of
increasingly powerful technologies, including new chatbots like ChatGPT and Google Bard. Mr. Sutskever went on
to become chief scientist at OpenAI. In 2018, Dr. Hinton and two other longtime
collaborators received the Turing Award, often
called “the Nobel Prize of computing,” for their work on neural networks.
Around the same time, Google, OpenAI and other companies
began building neural networks that learned from huge amounts of digital text.
Dr. Hinton thought it was a powerful way for machines to understand and
generate language, but it was inferior to the way humans handled language.
Then, last year, as Google and OpenAI built systems using
much larger amounts of data, his view changed. He still believed the systems
were inferior to the human brain in some ways but he thought they were
eclipsing human intelligence in others. “Maybe what is going on in these
systems,” he said, “is actually a lot better than what is going on in the
brain.”
As companies improve their A.I. systems, he believes, they
become increasingly dangerous. “Look at how it was five years ago and how it is
now,” he said of A.I. technology. “Take the difference and propagate it
forwards. That’s scary.”
Until last year, he said, Google acted as a “proper steward”
for the technology, careful not to release something that might cause harm. But
now that Microsoft has augmented its Bing search engine with a chatbot —
challenging Google’s core business — Google is racing to deploy the same kind of
technology. The tech giants are locked in a competition that might
be impossible to stop, Dr. Hinton said.
His immediate concern is that the
internet will be flooded with false photos, videos and text, and the average person will
“not be able to know what is true anymore.”
He is also worried that A.I. technologies will in time upend
the job market. Today, chatbots like ChatGPT tend to complement human workers,
but they could replace paralegals, personal assistants, translators and others
who handle rote tasks. “It takes away the drudge work,” he said. “It might take
away more than that.”
Down the road, he is worried that future versions of the
technology pose a threat to humanity because they often learn unexpected behavior from the vast
amounts of data they analyze. This becomes an issue, he said, as
individuals and companies allow A.I. systems not only to generate their own
computer code but actually run that code on their own. And he fears a day when
truly autonomous weapons — those killer robots — become reality.
“The idea that this stuff could actually get smarter than
people — a few people believed that,” he said. “But most people thought it was
way off. And I thought it was way off. I thought it was 30 to 50 years or even
longer away. Obviously, I no longer think that.”
Many other experts, including many of his students and
colleagues, say this threat is hypothetical. But Dr. Hinton believes that the
race between Google and Microsoft and others will escalate into a global race
that will not stop without some sort of global regulation.
But that may be impossible, he said. Unlike with nuclear
weapons, he said, there is no way of knowing whether companies or countries are
working on the technology in secret. The best hope is for the world’s leading
scientists to collaborate on ways of controlling the technology. “I don’t think
they should scale this up more until they have understood whether they can
control it,” he said.
Dr. Hinton said that when people
used to ask him how he could work on technology that was potentially dangerous,
he would paraphrase Robert Oppenheimer, who led the U.S. effort to build the
atomic bomb: “When you see something that is technically sweet, you go ahead
and do it.”
He does not say that anymore.”
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