ChatGPT is now everywhere. And the OpenAI chatbot is just the tip of the AI iceberg. For Mustafa Suleyman, co-founder of the famous DeepMind laboratory, now owned by Google, the enthusiasm for artificial intelligence will have a direct impact on workers.
“There is no doubt that many jobs in white-collar countries will be very different in the next five to 10 years,” he explains during a conference in San Francisco, discovered by the financial times. “There are going to be a lot of losers. [et ils] she will be very unhappy, very worried,” she predicts.
300 million jobs at risk
Mustafa Suleyman, who left DeepMind last year, believes that governments should now think about how they will handle this crisis in the labor market. “It requires material compensation,” he professes. “It’s a political and economic decision that we have to start talking about seriously.”
This AI pioneer isn’t the only one warning about the risks. Geoffrey Hinton, creator of the concept of neural network technology, now at the base of all artificial intelligence, and also a former Googler, does not hide some concern. “It’s hard to see how you can prevent bad actors from using it for malicious purposes,” he recently summarized.
In a recent report, Goldman Sachs bank estimated the number of jobs worldwide that artificial intelligence systems could replace at 300 million. That’s about a quarter of global activity.
Source: BFM TV
