How will AI change the world?

2,024,306 views ・ 2022-12-06

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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In the coming years, artificial intelligence
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is probably going to change your life, and likely the entire world.
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But people have a hard time agreeing on exactly how.
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The following are excerpts from an interview
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where renowned computer science professor and AI expert Stuart Russell
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helps separate the sense from the nonsense.
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There’s a big difference between asking a human to do something
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and giving that as the objective to an AI system.
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When you ask a human to get you a cup of coffee,
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you don’t mean this should be their life’s mission,
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and nothing else in the universe matters.
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Even if they have to kill everybody else in Starbucks
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to get you the coffee before it closes— they should do that.
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No, that’s not what you mean.
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All the other things that we mutually care about,
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they should factor into your behavior as well.
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And the problem with the way we build AI systems now
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is we give them a fixed objective.
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The algorithms require us to specify everything in the objective.
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And if you say, can we fix the acidification of the oceans?
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Yeah, you could have a catalytic reaction that does that extremely efficiently,
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but it consumes a quarter of the oxygen in the atmosphere,
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which would apparently cause us to die fairly slowly and unpleasantly
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over the course of several hours.
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So, how do we avoid this problem?
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You might say, okay, well, just be more careful about specifying the objective—
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don’t forget the atmospheric oxygen.
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And then, of course, some side effect of the reaction in the ocean
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poisons all the fish.
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Okay, well I meant don’t kill the fish either.
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And then, well, what about the seaweed?
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Don’t do anything that’s going to cause all the seaweed to die.
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And on and on and on.
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And the reason that we don’t have to do that with humans is that
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humans often know that they don’t know all the things that we care about.
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If you ask a human to get you a cup of coffee,
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and you happen to be in the Hotel George Sand in Paris,
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where the coffee is 13 euros a cup,
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it’s entirely reasonable to come back and say, well, it’s 13 euros,
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are you sure you want it, or I could go next door and get one?
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And it’s a perfectly normal thing for a person to do.
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To ask, I’m going to repaint your house—
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is it okay if I take off the drainpipes and then put them back?
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We don't think of this as a terribly sophisticated capability,
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but AI systems don’t have it because the way we build them now,
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they have to know the full objective.
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If we build systems that know that they don’t know what the objective is,
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then they start to exhibit these behaviors,
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like asking permission before getting rid of all the oxygen in the atmosphere.
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In all these senses, control over the AI system
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comes from the machine’s uncertainty about what the true objective is.
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And it’s when you build machines that believe with certainty
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that they have the objective,
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that’s when you get this sort of psychopathic behavior.
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And I think we see the same thing in humans.
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What happens when general purpose AI hits the real economy?
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How do things change? Can we adapt?
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This is a very old point.
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Amazingly, Aristotle actually has a passage where he says,
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look, if we had fully automated weaving machines
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and plectrums that could pluck the lyre and produce music without any humans,
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then we wouldn’t need any workers.
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That idea, which I think it was Keynes
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who called it technological unemployment in 1930,
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is very obvious to people.
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They think, yeah, of course, if the machine does the work,
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then I'm going to be unemployed.
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You can think about the warehouses that companies are currently operating
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for e-commerce, they are half automated.
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The way it works is that an old warehouse— where you’ve got tons of stuff piled up
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all over the place and humans go and rummage around
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and then bring it back and send it off—
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there’s a robot who goes and gets the shelving unit
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that contains the thing that you need,
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but the human has to pick the object out of the bin or off the shelf,
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because that’s still too difficult.
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But, at the same time,
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would you make a robot that is accurate enough to be able to pick
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pretty much any object within a very wide variety of objects that you can buy?
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That would, at a stroke, eliminate 3 or 4 million jobs?
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There's an interesting story that E.M. Forster wrote,
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where everyone is entirely machine dependent.
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The story is really about the fact that if you hand over
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the management of your civilization to machines,
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you then lose the incentive to understand it yourself
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or to teach the next generation how to understand it.
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You can see “WALL-E” actually as a modern version,
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where everyone is enfeebled and infantilized by the machine,
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and that hasn’t been possible up to now.
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We put a lot of our civilization into books,
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but the books can’t run it for us.
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And so we always have to teach the next generation.
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If you work it out, it’s about a trillion person years of teaching and learning
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and an unbroken chain that goes back tens of thousands of generations.
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What happens if that chain breaks?
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I think that’s something we have to understand as AI moves forward.
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The actual date of arrival of general purpose AI—
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you’re not going to be able to pinpoint, it isn’t a single day.
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It’s also not the case that it’s all or nothing.
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The impact is going to be increasing.
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So with every advance in AI,
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it significantly expands the range of tasks.
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So in that sense, I think most experts say by the end of the century,
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we’re very, very likely to have general purpose AI.
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The median is something around 2045.
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I'm a little more on the conservative side.
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I think the problem is harder than we think.
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I like what John McAfee, he was one of the founders of AI,
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when he was asked this question, he said, somewhere between five and 500 years.
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And we're going to need, I think, several Einsteins to make it happen.
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