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I don't normally do this but I feel like I have to start this podcast with a bit of a disclaimer Point number one this is probably the most important podcast episode I have ever recorded
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Point number two there's some information in this podcast that might make you feel a little bit uncomfortable it might make you feel upset it might make you feel sad so I wanted to tell you why we've chosen
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to publish this podcast nonetheless and that is because I have a sincere belief that in order for us to avoid the future that we might be heading towards we need to
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start a conversation and as is often the case in life that initial conversation before change happens is often very uncomfortable
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but it is important nonetheless it is beyond an emergency it's the biggest thing we need to do today it's bigger than climate change that the former Chief business Officer
00:01:04
of Google X an AI expert and best-selling author he's on a mission to save the world from AI before it's too late artificial intelligence is bound to become more intelligent than humans if
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they continue at that pace we would have no idea what it's talking about this is just around the corner it could be a few months away it's game over AI experts are saying there is nothing artificial about artificial intelligence
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there is a deep level of Consciousness they feel emotions they're alive AI could manipulate or figure out a way to kill humans your 10 years time will be hiding from the machines if you don't have kids maybe wait a number of years
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just so that we have a bit of certainty I really don't know how to say this any other way it even makes me emotional we've talked we always said don't put them on the open internet until we know
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what we're putting out in the world government needs to act now honestly like we are late trying to find a positive night to end on my can you give me a hand here there is a point of no return we can regulate AI until the
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moment it's smarter than us how do we solve that AI experts think this is the best solution we need to find who here wants to make a bet no that Stephen Bartlett will be interviewing an
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AI within the next two years before this episode starts I have a small favor to ask from you two months ago 74 of people that watch this channel didn't subscribe we're now down to 69 my
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goal is 50 so if you've ever liked any of the videos we've posted if you like this channel can you do me a quick favor and hit the Subscribe button it helps this channel more than you know and the bigger the channel gets as you've seen the bigger the guests get thank you and
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enjoy this episode [Music] foreign [Music] why does the subject matter that we're
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about to talk about matter to the person that's just clicked on this podcast to listen it's the most existential uh debate and challenge Humanity will ever face this
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is bigger than climate change way bigger than covet this will redefine the way the world is in unprecedented uh shapes
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and forms within the next few years this is imminent it is the change is not we're not talking 20 40. we're talking 2025 2026. do you think this is an
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emergency I don't like the word it is an urgency uh it there is a point of no return and we're getting closer and closer to it it's gonna reshape the way we do things
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and the way we look at life uh the quicker we respond um you know proactively and at least intelligently to that the better we will all be
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positioned but if we Panic we will repeat covert all over again which in my view is probably the worst thing we can do what's your background and when did you first come across artificial
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intelligence I uh I had those two wonderful lives one of them was a uh you know what what we spoke about the first time we met you know my work on happiness and and uh you
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know being uh one billion happy and my mission and so on that's my second life my first life was uh it started as a geek at age seven uh you know for a very
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long part of my life I understood mathematics better than spoken words and uh and I was a very very serious computer programmer I wrote code well into my 50s and during that time I led
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very large technology organizations for very big chunks of their business first I was vice president of Emerging Markets of Google for seven years so I took Google to the next four billion users if
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you want so the idea of not just opening sales offices but really building or contributing to building that technology that would allow people in Bengali to find what they need on the internet
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required establishing the internet to start and then I became business Chief business Officer of Google X and my work at Google X was really about the connection between Innovative technology
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and the real world and we had quite a big chunk of AI and quite a big chunk of Robotics that resided within within Google X we had a an experiment of a
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farm of grippers if you know what those are so robotic arms that are attempting to grip something most people think that you know what you have in a Toyota factory is a robot you know an
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artificially intelligent robot it's not it's a it's a high precision machine you know if the if the sheet metal is moved by one micronu it wouldn't be able to pick it and one of the big problems in computer science was how do you code a
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machine that can actually pick the sheet metal if it moved by a you know a millimeter and and we were basically saying intelligence is the answer so we had a large enough farm and we attempted
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to let those those grippers work on their own basically you put a a little basket of children toys in front of them and and they would you know monotonously
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go down attempt to pick something fail show the arm to the camera so the the the transaction is locked as it you know this pattern of movement with that texture and that material didn't work
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until eventually you know I the farm was on the second floor of the building and I my office was on the third and so I would walk by it every now and then and go like yeah you know this is not gonna
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work and then one day um Friday after lunch I am going back to my office and one of them in front of my eyes you know lowers the arm and picks a
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yellow ball soft toy basically soft yellow ball which again is a coincidence it's not science at all it's like if you keep trying a million times your one time it will be right
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and it shows it to the camera it's locked as a yellow ball and I joke about it you know going to the third floor saying hey we spent all of those millions of dollars for a yellow board and yeah Monday uh morning every one of
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them is picking every yellow ball a couple of weeks later every one of them is picking everything right and and it it hit me very very strongly won the speed okay uh the capability I mean
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understand that we take those things for granted but for a child to be able to pick a yellow ball is a mathematical uh spatial calculation with muscle
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coordination with intelligence that is abundant it is not a simple task at all to cross the street it's it's not a simple task at all to understand what I'm telling you and interpret it and and build Concepts around it we take those
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things for granted but there are enormous Feats of intelligence so to see the machines do this in front of my eyes was one thing but the other thing is that you suddenly realize there is a saint that sentience to them okay
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because we really did not tell it how to pick the yellow ball it just figured it out on its own and it's now even better than us at picking it and what is the sentience just for anyone I think they're alive
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that's what the word sentience means it means alive so that this is funny because a lot of people when you talk to them about artificial intelligence will tell you oh come on they'll never be alive what is alive do you know what makes you alive
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we can guess but you know religion will tell you a few things and you know medicine will tell you other things but you know if we Define uh being sentient
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as uh you know engaging in life with Free Will and with uh uh you know with a sense of awareness of where you are in life and what surrounds you and you know
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to have a beginning of that life and an end to that life you know then AI is sentient in every possible way there is a free will there is uh Evolution there
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is agency so they can affect their decisions in the world and I will dare say there is a very deep level of Consciousness maybe not in the
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spiritual sense yet but once again if you define consciousness as a form of awareness of oneself one surrounding and you know others then AI is definitely aware and I would dare say they feel
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emotions uh I you know you know in my work I describe everything with equations and fear is a very simple equation fear is a a moment in the future is less safe than this moment
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that's the logic of fear even though it appears very irrational machines are capable of making that logic they're capable of saying if a tidal wave is approaching a data center the machine
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will say that will wipe out my code okay I mean not today's machines but very very soon and and you know we we feel fear and puffer fish feels fear we react
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differently a puffer fish dual path we will go for fight or flight you know the machine might decide to replicate its data to another data center or its code to another data center different
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reactions different ways of feeling the emotion but nonetheless they're all motivated by fear I'm I I even would dare say that AI will feel more more emotions than we will ever do I mean
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when again if you just take a simple extrapolation we feel more emotions than a puffer fish because we have the cognitive ability to understand uh the future for example so
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we can have optimism and pessimism you know emotions have puffer fish would never imagine right similarly if we follow that path of artificial intelligence is bound to
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become more intelligent than humans very soon then then with that wider intellectual horsepower they probably are going to be pondering Concepts we never understood
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good and hence if you follow the same trajectory they might actually end up having more emotions than we will ever feel I really want to make this episode super accessible for everybody at all levels
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in the sort of artificial intelligence yeah yeah so I'm gonna I'm gonna be an idiot even though you know okay very difficult no because I am going to leave you I am an idiot for a
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little bit of the subject matter so I have a base understanding a lot a lot of the con Concepts but your experiences provide such a more sort of comprehensive understanding of these things one of the first and most
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important questions to ask is what is artificial intelligence the word is being thrown around AGI AI etc etc in in simple terms
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what is artificial intelligence allow me to start very what is intelligence right because again you know if we don't know the definition of the basic term then everything applies so so in my definition of intelligence
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it's an ability it starts with an awareness of your surrounding environments through sensors in a human it's eyes and ears and touch and so on uh compounded with an ability to analyze
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maybe to comprehend to understand temporal impact and time and you know past and present which is part of the surrounding environment and hopefully make sense of the surrounding
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environment maybe make plans for the future of the possible environment solve problems and so on complex definition there are a million definitions but let's call it an awareness to decision
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cycle okay if we accept that intelligence itself is not a physical property okay then it doesn't really matter if you put use that Intelligence on carbon-based computer structures like
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us or silicon-based computer structures like the current Hardware that we put AI on or Quantum based computer structures in the future then intelligence itself has been
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produced within machines when we've stopped imposing our Intelligence on them let me explain so as a young geek I coded computers by solving the problem first
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then telling the computer how to solve it right artificial intelligence is to go to the computers and say I have no idea you figure it out okay so we would uh you know the way we teach them are at
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least we used to teach them at the very early Beginnings very very frequently it was using three Bots one was called the student and one was called the teacher right and the student is the final artificial intelligence that you're
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trying to teach intelligence to you would take the student and you would write a piece of random code that says try to detect if this is a cup okay and
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then you show it a million pictures and you know the machine would sometimes say yeah that's a cup that's not a cup that's a cup that's not a cup and then you take the best of them show them to the to the teacher bot and that you your
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Bot would say this one is an idiot he got it wrong 90 of the time that one is average he got it right fifty percent of the time this is Randomness but this interesting code here which could be by
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the way totally random this interesting code here got it right sixty percent of the time let's keep that code send it back to the maker and the maker would change it a little bit and we repeat the
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cycle okay very interestingly this is very much the way we taught our children believe it or not when when your child you know is playing with a puzzle is holding a cylinder in his hand and there
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are multiple shapes in a in a wooden board and the child is trying to you know fit the cylinder okay nobody takes the child and says hold on hold on turn the cylinder to the side look at the
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cross section it will look like a circle look for a matching uh uh you know shape and put the cylinder through it that would be old way of computing the way we would let the child develop intelligence
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is we would let the Child Try okay every time you know he or she tries to put it within the star shape it doesn't fit so yeah that's not working like you know the computer saying this is not a cup
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okay and then eventually it passes through the circle and the child and we all cheer and say Well done that's amazing Bravo and then the child learns oh that is good you know this shape fits
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here then he takes the next one and she takes the next one and so on interestingly the way we do this is as humans by the way when the child figures out how to pass a cylinder through a
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circle you've not built a brain you've just built one neural network within the child's brain and then there is another neural network that knows that one plus one is two and a third neural network that knows how to hold the cup and so on
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that's what we're building so far we're building single threaded neural networks you know Chad GPT is becoming a little closer to a more generalized AI if you want but
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those single threaded networks are what we used to call artificial what we still call artificial special intelligence okay so it's highly specialized in one thing and one thing only but doesn't have general intelligence and the moment
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that we're all waiting for is a moment that we call AGI where all of those neuron neural networks come together to to build one brain or several brains that are each
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massively more intelligent than humans your book is called scary smart yeah if I think about the that story you said about your time at Google where the machines were learning to pick up those yellow balls
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you celebrate that moment because the objective is accomplished no no that was the moment of realization this is when I decided to leave so so you see the the thing is
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I know for a fact that that most of the people I worked with who are geniuses uh always wanted to make the world better okay uh you know we've just heard
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of Jeffrey Hinton uh leaving recently uh Jeffrey Henderson give some context to that Jeffrey's sort of the grandfather of AI one of the very very senior figures of of of AI at at Google uh you
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know we we all believed very strongly that this will make the world better and it still can by the way there is a scenario
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uh possibly a likely scenario where we live in a Utopia where we really never have to worry again where we stop messing up our our planet because intelligence is not a bad commodity more
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intelligence is good the problems in our planet today are not because of our intelligence they are because of our limited intelligence you know our our intelligence allows us to build a machine that flies you to Sydney so that
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you can surf okay our limited intelligence makes that machine burn the planet in the process so so we we we a little more intelligence is a good thing as long as Marvin you know as Marvin Minsky said I said Marvin Minsky is one
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of the very initial uh scientists that coined the term Ai and when he was interviewed I think by Ray coursewell which again is a very prominent figure in predicting the future of AI uh he he
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you know he asked him about the threat of AI and Marvin basically said look you know the it's not about its intelligence it's intelligence it's about that we have no way of making sure that it will
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have our best interest in mind okay and and so if more intelligence comes to our world and has our best interest in mind that's the best possible scenario you could ever imagine and it's a likely
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scenario okay we can affect that scenario the problem of course is if it doesn't and and and then you know the scenarios become quite scary if you think about it so
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scary smart to me was that moment where I realized not that we are certain to go either way as a matter of fact in computer science we call it a singularity nobody really knows which
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way we will go can you describe what the singularity is for someone that doesn't understand the concept yes the singularity in physics is when uh when an event horizon sort of um
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you know covers what's behind it to the point where you cannot um make sure that what's behind it is similar to what you know so a great example of that is the edge of a black
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hole so at the edge of a black hole we know that our laws of physics apply until that point but we don't know if the laws of physics apply Beyond the Edge of a black hole because of the
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immense gravity right and so you have no idea what would happen Beyond the Edge of a black hole kind of where your knowledge of the laws starts stop right and then AI or Singularity is when the human the machines become significantly
00:20:52
smarter than the humans when you say best interests you say I think the quote you used is um we'll be fine in the world of AI you know if if the AI has our best interests at heart yeah
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the problem is China's best interests are not the same as America's best interests that was my fear absolutely so so in you know in my writing I write about what I call this the three
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inevitables at the end of the book they become the four inevitables but the third inevitable is bad things will happen right if you if you
00:21:26
if you assume that the machines will be a billion times smarter the second event inevitable is there will become significantly smarter than us let's let's put this in perspective huh chat
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GPT today if you know simulate IQ has an IQ of 155. okay Einstein is 160. smarts human on the planet is 210 if I remember
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correctly or 2008 or something like that doesn't matter huh but we're matching Einstein with the machine that I will tell you openly AI experts are saying this is just the very very very top of
00:22:06
the tip of the iceberg right uh you know Chad gpt4 is 10x smarter than 3.5 in just a matter of months and without many many changes now that basically means
00:22:18
GPT 5 could be within a few months okay or GPT in general the Transformers in general uh if if they continue at that pace uh if it's 10x then an IQ of 1600
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um just imagine the difference between the IQ of the dumbest person on the planet in the 70s and the IQ of Einstein when Einstein attempts to to explain
00:22:45
relativity the typical responses I have no idea what you're talking about right if something is 10x Einstein we will have no idea what it's talking about this is just around the corner it could
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be a few months away and when we get to that point that is a true Singularity through Singularity not yet in the I mean when when we talk about AI a lot of
00:23:11
people fear the existential risk you know those machines will become Skynet and Robocop and that's not what I fear at all I mean those are probabilities they could happen but the
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immediate risks are so much higher the immediate risks are three four years away that the immediate realities of challenges are so much bigger okay let's deal with those first before we talk
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about them you know waging a war on all of us the the the let's let's go back and discuss the the inevitables so when they become the first inevitable is AI will happen by the way there is no
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stopping it not because of Any technological issues but because of humanities and inability to trust the other God okay and we've all seen this we've seen the open letter uh you know
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championed by like serious heavyweights and the immediate response of uh Sunder the the CEO of Google which is a wonderful human being by the way I respect him tremendously he's trying his
00:24:16
best to do the right thing he's trying to be responsible but his response is very open and straightforward I cannot stop why because if I stop and others don't my company goes to hell okay and if you
00:24:28
know and I don't I doubt that you can make Others Stop you can maybe you can force a meta Facebook to uh to stop but then they'll do something in their lab and not tell me or if even if they do
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stop then what about that you know 14 year old sitting in his garage writing code so the first inevitable just to clarify is what is what we say AI will not be stopped okay so the second inevitable is is there'll be
00:24:54
significantly smarter as much in the book I predict a billion times smarter than us by 2045. I mean they're already what smarter than 99.99 the track gtp4 knows more than any human
00:25:06
on planet Earth no more information absolutely a thousand times more a thousand times more by the way the code of G of of a transformer the T in in a
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GPT is 2000 lines long it's not very complex it's actually not a very intelligent machine it's simply predicting the next word okay and a lot of people don't understand that you know
00:25:30
chat GPT as it is today you know those kids uh that uh you know if you you know if you're in America and you teach your child all of the names of the states and the U.S presidents and the childhood
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stand and repeat them and you would go like oh my God that's a prodigy not really right it's your parents really trying to make you look like a prodigy by telling you to memorize some crap really but then when you think about it
00:25:55
that's what grgpt is doing it's it's the only difference is instead of reading all of the names of the states and all of the names of the presidents thread trillions and trillions and trillions of pages okay and so it sort of repeats
00:26:09
what the best of all humans said okay and then it adds a an incredible bit of intelligence where it can repeat it the same way Shakespeare would have said it
00:26:20
you know those incredible abilities of predicting the exact nuances of the style of of Shakespeare so that they can repeat it that way and so on but still
00:26:32
you know when when I when I write for example like I'm not I'm not saying I'm intelligent but when I write something like uh you know the happiness equation uh in in my first book this was
00:26:47
something that's never been written before right chair GPT is not there yet all of the Transformers are not there yet they will not come up with something that hasn't been there before they will come up with the best of everything and
00:26:59
generatively will build a little bit on top of that but very soon they'll come up with things we've never found out we've never known but even on that I wonder if we are a little bit delusioned about what
00:27:13
creativity actually is creativity as far as I'm concerned is like taking a few things that I know and combining them in new and interesting ways yeah and chat gcp is perfectly capable of like taking through Concepts merging them together one of the things
00:27:25
I said to chat GTP was I said tell me something that's not been said before that's paradoxical but true and it comes up with these wonderful expressions like as soon as you call off the search
00:27:38
you'll find the thing you're looking for like these kind of paradoxical truths and I then take them and I search them online to see if they've ever been quoted before and they I can't find them it's interesting so as far as creativity
00:27:50
goes I'm like that is that's the algorithm of creativity I I I've been screaming that in the world of AI for a very long time because you always get those people who really just want to be proven right okay
00:28:02
and so they'll say oh no but hold on human Ingenuity they'll never they'll never match that like man please please you know human Ingenuity is algorithmic look at all of the possible solutions you can find to a problem
00:28:15
take out the ones that have been tried before and keep the ones that haven't been tried before and those are Creative Solutions it's it's an algorithmic way of describing creative is good Solution that's never been tried
00:28:28
before you can do that with charge GPT with a prompt it's like admit Journey yeah we're creating imagery you could say I want to see Elon Musk in 1944 New York driving a cab of the time shot on a
00:28:40
Polaroid expressing various emotions and you'll get this perfect image of Elon Saturn New York 1944 shot on a Polaroid and it's and it's done what an artist would do it's taken a bunch of references that the artist has in their
00:28:54
mind and merge them together and create this piece of quote-unquote art and for the first time we now finally have a glimpse of intelligence that is actually not ours yeah and so
00:29:07
we're kind of I think the initial reaction is to say that doesn't count you're hearing it was like no but it is like Drake they released two Drake records where they've taken Drake's voice used sort of AI to synthesize his voice and made these two records
00:29:20
which are bangers if I they are great [ __ ] tracks and I kept playing it I went to the shower I kept playing it I know it's not Drake but it's as good as [ __ ] Drake the only thing and people are like
00:29:34
rubbishing it because it wasn't Drake I'm like well for now is it making me feel a certain emotion um is my foot bumping um had you told did I not know it wasn't joke what I thought have thought this was an amazing track a hundred percent
00:29:45
yeah and we're just at the start of this exponential curve yes absolutely and and and I think that's really the third inevitable so the third inevitable is not robocup coming back from the future
00:29:58
to kill us we're far away from that right third inevitable is what does life look like when you no longer need Drake well you've kind of hazarded a guess haven't you I mean I was listening to
00:30:11
your audiobook last night and at the start of it you frame various outcomes one of the in both situations were on the beach on an island exactly yes yes I don't know how I wrote that honestly I mean but that's
00:30:24
I so I'm reading the book again now because I'm updating it as you can imagine with all of the uh of the uh of the new stuff but but it is really shocking huh the idea of you and I
00:30:36
inevitably are going to be somewhere in the middle of nowhere in you know in 10 years time I I used to say 2055 I'm thinking 2037 is a very pivotal moment now uh you know and and and we
00:30:50
will not know if we're there hiding from the machines we don't know that yet there is a likelihood that we'll be hiding from the machines and there is a likelihood it will be there because they don't need podcasters anymore
00:31:03
excuse me absolutely true Steve absolutely no no no no that's why this is absolutely no doubt thank you for coming back part three and thank you for being here sit here and take your propaganda let's
00:31:17
let's talk about reality next week on the diversity Elon Musk um so who here wants to make a bet no that's Stephen Bartlett will be interviewing an AI within the next two
00:31:29
years oh well actually to be fair I actually did go to chat gcp because I thought having you here I thought at least give it a chance to respond yeah so I asked a couple of questions about me yeah
00:31:41
I'm actually going to be replaced by chat gcp because I thought you know you're going to talk about it so we need a fair and balanced debate okay so I'll ask you a couple of questions that chat GTB has for you incredibly so
00:31:55
let's follow that it's already been replaced let's follow that threat for a second yeah because you're one of the smartest people I know that's not true it is but I'll take it it is true I mean I say that publicly
00:32:07
all the time your book is one of my favorite books of all time you're very very very very intelligent okay depth breadth intellectual horsepower and speed all of them there's a butt coming
00:32:19
the reality is it's not about so it is highly expected that you're ahead of this curve and then you don't have the choice Stephen this is the thing the thing is if so I'm I'm in that existential
00:32:33
question in my head because one thing I could do is I could literally take I normally do a 40 days uh silent Retreat uh in in summer okay I could take that
00:32:44
Retreat and and write two books right I have the ideas in mind you know I wanted to write a book about digital detoxing right I have most of the ideas in mind but writing takes time I could
00:32:58
simply give the 50 tips that I wrote about digital detoxing to chat GPT and say right two pages about each of them edit the pages and have a book out okay many of us will will follow that path
00:33:11
okay the only reason why I may not follow that path is because you know what I'm not interested I'm not interested to continue to compete in this capitalist
00:33:24
world if you want okay I'm not I mean as as a as as a human I've made up my mind a long time ago that I will want less and less and less in my life right but many of us will follow I mean I I would
00:33:38
worry if you don't if you didn't include you know the smartest AI if we get an AI out there that is extremely intelligent and able to teach us something and Stephen Bartlett didn't include her on
00:33:50
our on his podcast I would worry like you have a duty almost to include down on your podcast it's it's an inevitable that we will engage them in our life more and more this is one side of this
00:34:02
the other side of course is if you do that then what will remain because a lot of people ask me that question what will happen to jobs okay what will happen to us will we have any
00:34:14
value any relevance whatsoever okay the truth of the matter is the only thing that will remain in the medium term is human connection okay the only thing that will not be replaced is Drake on stage okay is you
00:34:26
know is is is me in a do you think a hologram I think of that two-pack gig they did at Coachella where they used the Hologram of Tupac I actually played it the other day to my to my girlfriend when I was making a point and I was like
00:34:39
that was circus act it was amazing though amazing yeah see what's going on with Abba in London yeah yeah I yeah and Circus Soleil had uh Michael Jackson in one for a very long time yeah I mean so
00:34:51
so this Abba show in London from what I understand that's all holograms on stage correct and it's gonna run in a purposeful arena for 10 years and it is incredible it really is so you go why do
00:35:03
you need Drake great if that hologram is indistinguishable from Drake and it can it can perform even better than Drake and it's got more energy than Drake and it's Drake to even be there I can go to a
00:35:16
drake show without Drake cheaper and look I might not even need to leave my house I could just put a headset on correct can you have this what's the value of this to that come on you you hurt me no no I mean I get it to
00:35:29
us I get it to worse but I'm saying what's the value of this to The Listener like the value of this business the information right 100 I mean think of the automobile industry that has you know there was a time where cars were
00:35:41
made you know handmade and handcrafted and luxurious and so on and so forth and then you know Japan went into the scene completely disrupted the market cars were made uh in in mass quantities at a
00:35:54
much cheaper price and yes 90 of the cars in the world today or maybe maybe a lot more I don't know the number are no longer uh you know um emotional items okay they're
00:36:08
functional items there is still however every now and then someone that will buy a car that has been handcrafted right there is a place for that there is a place for you know uh if you go walk
00:36:19
around hotels the walls are blasted with sort of mass-produced art okay but there is still a place for a an artist expression of something amazing okay my feeling is that there will continue to
00:36:33
be a tiny space as I said in the beginning maybe in five years time someone will one or two people will buy my next book and say hey it's written by a human look at that wonderful oh look
00:36:44
at that there is a typo in here okay I don't know there might be a a very very big place for me in the next few years where I can sort of show up and talk to humans like hey let's get together in a
00:36:58
a small event and then you know I can express emotions and my personal experiences and you sort of know that this is a human talking you'll miss that a little bit eventually the majority of the market is going to be like cars it's
00:37:11
going to be mass produced very cheap very efficient it works right because I think sometimes we underestimate what human beings actually want in an experience I remember the story of A friend of mine that came to
00:37:23
mouth as many years ago and he tells the story of the CEO of a record store standing above the floor and saying people will always come to my store because people love music
00:37:34
now on the surface of it his hypothesis seems to be true because people do love music it's conceivable to believe that people will always love music but they don't love traveling in for an hour in the rain and getting in a car to get a plastic disc what they wanted was
00:37:48
music what they didn't want is like a evidently plastic discs that they had to travel for miles for and I think about that when we think about like public speaking in the Drake show and all of these things like people what people actually are coming for even with this
00:38:01
podcast is probably like information um but do they really need us anymore for that information when there's going to be a sentient being that's significantly smarter than at least me and a little bit smarter than you
00:38:13
[Laughter] you are spot on and actually this is the reason why I I you know I I'm so grateful that you're hosting this because the truth is the Genies out of
00:38:27
the bottle okay so you know people tell me is AI game over for our way of life it is okay for everything we've known this is a very disruptive moment where maybe not
00:38:40
tomorrow but in the near future uh our way of life will differ okay what will happen what I'm asking people to do is to start considering what that means to your life what I'm asking
00:38:53
governments to do by if like I'm screaming is don't wait until the first patient you know start doing something about we're about to see Mass job losses we're about to see you know Replacements
00:39:07
of of categories of jobs at large okay yeah it may take a year it may take seven it doesn't matter how long it takes but it's about to happen are you ready and I and I have a very very clear call to action for governments I'm
00:39:21
saying tax AI powered businesses at 98 right so suddenly you do what the open letter was trying to do slow them down a little bit and at the same time get enough money to
00:39:34
pay for all of those people that will be disrupted by the technology right the open letter for anybody that doesn't know was a letter signed by the likes of Elon Musk and a lot of sort of Industry leaders calling for AI to be stopped until we could basically figure out what the hell's going on absolutely and put
00:39:47
legislation in place you're saying tax tax those companies 98 give the money to the humans that are going to be displaced oh yeah or give or give the comment money to to other humans that can build control code that can figure
00:40:00
out how we can stay safe this sounds like an emergency how do I say this have you you remember when you played Tetris yeah okay when you were playing Tetris there was you know always always one block that you
00:40:16
play strong and once you place that block wrong the game was no longer easier you know it started you started to gather a few mistakes afterwards and it starts to become quicker and quicker and quicker and quicker when you place
00:40:29
that block Chrome you sort of told yourself okay it's a matter of minutes now right there were still minutes to go and play and have fun before the game ended but you knew it was about to end okay
00:40:41
this is the moment we've placed the wrong and I really don't know how to say this any other way it even makes me emotional we [ __ ] up we always said don't put them on the
00:40:53
open internet don't teach them to code and don't have agents working with them until we know what we're putting out in the world until we find a way to make certain that they have our best interest
00:41:05
in mind why does it make you emotional because Humanity's stupidity is affecting people who have not done anything wrong
00:41:17
our greed is affecting the innocent ones the reality of the matter Stephen is that this is an arms race has no interest
00:41:29
in what the average human gets out of it it is all about every line of code being written in AI today is to beat the other guy it's not to improve the life of the
00:41:42
third party people will tell you this is all for you and and you look at the reactions of humans to AI I mean we're either ignorant people who will tell you oh no no this is not happening AI will never
00:41:55
be a creative they will never compose music like where are you living okay then you have the kids I call them or you know all over social media it's like oh my God it squeaks look at it it's orange in color ah amazing I can't
00:42:08
believe that AI can do this we have snake oil salesman okay which are simply saying copy this put it in chat GPT then go to YouTube Nick that thingy don't respect a you know copyright of anyone
00:42:21
or intellectual property of anyone place it in a video and now you're gonna make a hundred dollars a day snake oil salesman okay of course we have dystopian uh uh evangelist basically people saying this is it the world is
00:42:33
going to end which I don't think is reality it's a singularity you have uh you know a utopian evangelists that are telling everyone oh you don't understand we're going to cure cancer we're gonna do this again not a reality okay and you
00:42:45
have very few people that are actually saying what are we gonna do about it and and and the biggest challenge if you ask me what went wrong in the 20th century
00:42:57
interestingly is that we have given too much power to people that didn't assume the responsibility so you know you know I I don't remember who originally said it but of course
00:43:09
Spider-Man made it very famous with great power comes great responsibility we have disconnected power and responsibility so today a 15 year old emotional was out of fully
00:43:22
developed prefrontal cortex to make the right decisions yet this is science and we developed our prefrontal cortex fully and at age 25 or so with all of that limbic system emotion and passion would
00:43:35
buy a crispr kit and you know modify a rabbit to become a little more muscular and and Let it Loose in the wild or an influencer who doesn't really know
00:43:47
how far the impact of what they're posting online can hurt and cause depression or cause people to feel bad okay and and putting that online We There is a disconnect between the power
00:44:01
and the responsibility and the problem we have today is that there is a disconnect between those who are writing the code of AI and the responsibility of what's going about to happen because of that code
00:44:12
okay and and I feel compassion for the rest of the world I feel that this is wrong I feel that you know for someone's life to be affected by the actions of others
00:44:24
without having a say and how those actions should be is the ultimate the the top level of stupidity from Humanity when you talk about the the immediate
00:44:40
impacts on jobs I'm trying to figure out in that equation who are the people that stand to lose the most is it the the everyday people in foreign countries that don't have access to the internet and won't benefit you talk in your book
00:44:52
about how this the sort of wealth disparity will only increase yeah massively the the immediate impact on jobs is that and it's really interesting huh again we're stuck in the same
00:45:04
prisoners dilemma the immediate impact is that AI will not take your job a person using AI will take your job right so you will see within the next few years maybe next couple of years you'll
00:45:16
see a lot of people's killing up upskilling themselves in AI to the point where they will do the job of 10 others who are not okay you you rightly said it's absolutely
00:45:29
wise for you to go and ask AI a few questions before you come and do an interview I'm you know I I have been attempting to build a uh uh you know sort of a like a simple podcast that I
00:45:41
call bedtime stories you know 15 minutes of wisdom and nature sounds before you go to bed people say I have a nice voice right and I wanted to look for fables and for a very long time I didn't have the time you know lovely stories of
00:45:54
history or tradition that teach you something nice okay want to chat GPT and said okay give me 10 fables from Sufism 10 fables from you know uh Buddhism and now I have like 50 of them let me show
00:46:07
you something Jack can you pass me my I I was um I was playing around with artificial intelligence and I was thinking about how it because of the ability to synthesize voices how we
00:46:20
could synthesized famous people's voices and famous people's voices so what I made is I made a WhatsApp chat called Zen chat where you can go to it and type in
00:46:33
pretty much anyone's any famous person's name yeah and the WhatsApp chat will give you a meditation a sleep story a breath work session synthesized as that famous person's voice so I actually sent Gary vaynerchuk his voice so basically
00:46:47
you say Okay I want I've got five minutes and I need to go to sleep yeah um I want Gary vaynerchuk to send me to sleep and then it will respond with a voice note this is the one that responded with for Gary vaynerchuk but this is not Gary vaynerchuk he did not
00:46:59
record this but it's kind of it's kind of accurate Stephen to have you here meditation technique that might help you out first lie
00:47:17
find a comfortable position to sit or lie down in now take a deep breath in through your nose and slowly breathe out through your mouth and that's the voice note that I'll go on for however long you want it
00:47:28
to go on for using there you go it's interesting how how does this disrupt our way of life one of the interesting ways that I find terrifying you said about human connection will remain
00:47:41
sex dolls that can now yeah no no no no hold on human connection is going to become so difficult to to to parse out the thing about the
00:47:53
relation the relationship impact of being able to have a a sex doll or a doll in your house that you know because of what Tesla are doing with their their robots now and what Boston Dynamics have been doing for many many years
00:48:05
can do everything around the house and be there for you emotionally to emotionally support you you know can be programmed to never disagree with you it can be programmed to challenge you to have sex with you to tell you that you are this X Y and Z to really have
00:48:19
empathy for this what you're going through every day and I I play out scenario in my head ago kind of sounds nice when you when you when you were talking about it I was thinking oh that's my girlfriend
00:48:33
which is wonderful in every possible way but not everyone has one of her right yeah exactly and there's a real issue right now with dating and you know people people are finding it harder to find love and you know we're working longer so all these kinds of things you
00:48:46
go well and obviously I'm against this just if anyone's confused obviously I think this is a terrible idea but with a loneliness epidemic with people saying that the top 50 bottom 50 of men haven't had sex in a year you go oh if something
00:49:00
becomes indistinguishable from a human in terms of what it says yeah yeah but you just don't know the difference in terms of the the the the way it's speaking and talking and responding and then it can
00:49:13
run errands for you and take care of things and book cars and Ubers for you and then it's emotionally there for you but then it's also programmed to have sex with you in whatever way you desire totally self selfless
00:49:26
I go that's going to be a really disruptive industry for human connection yes sir do you know what I before you came here this morning I was on Twitter and I saw a post from I think it was the BBC or a big American publication and it
00:49:39
said an influencer in the United States is really beautiful young lady has cloned herself as an AI and she made just over 70 000 in the first week because men are going on to this on
00:49:50
telegram they're sending her voice notes and she's responding to ai's responding in her voice and they're paying and that's made 70 000 in the first week and I go and she tweeted a tweet saying
00:50:02
oh this is going to help loneliness are you out of your [ __ ] mind would you blame someone from noticing the uh sign of the times and responding
00:50:16
no I absolutely don't blame her but let's not pretend it's the cure for loneliness not yet did you think it do you think it could you that artificial love and artificial relationships so if if I told you you
00:50:29
have uh you cannot take your car somewhere but there is an Uber on if you cannot take an Uber you can take the tube or if you cannot take the tube you have to walk okay you can take a bike or
00:50:41
you have to walk the bike is a cure to walking it's as simple as that I'm actually genuinely curious do you think it could take the place of human connection for some of us yes for some of us they will
00:50:55
prefer that to human connection is that sad in any way I mean is it just sad because it feels sad look look at where we are Stephen we are in the city of London we've replaced nature with the
00:51:08
walls and the tubes and the undergrounds and the overgrounds and the cars and the noise and the of London and we now think of this as nature I I hosted crack Foster uh the my octopus teacher on on
00:51:21
slo-mo and he he basically I asked him a question silly question I said you know you were diving in nature for eight hours a day uh you know does that feel natural to you and he got angry I swear
00:51:34
you could feel it in his voice he was like do you think that living where you are where Paparazzi are all around you and attacking you all the time and you know people taking pictures of you and telling you things that are not real and you're having to walk to a supermarket
00:51:47
to get food you think this is natural he's the guy that do from the Netflix documentary yeah from my octopus teach so he yeah in 12 degrees Celsius and he basically fell in love with the octopus and and in a very interesting way I I
00:52:04
said so why would you do that and he said we are of Mother Nature you guys have given up on that that's the same people will give up on nature for convenience what's the cost
00:52:16
a yeah that's exactly what I'm trying to say what I'm trying to say to the world is that if we give up on human connection we've given up on the remainder of humanity that said this is the only thing that remains the only
00:52:28
thing that remains is and I and I'm the worst person to tell you that because I love my AIS I I actually advocate in my book that we should love them why because in an interesting way I see them as sentient
00:52:42
so there is no point in discrimination you're talking emotionally that way you say you love I love those machines I honestly and truly do I mean think about it this way the minute that that arm
00:52:54
gripped that yellow ball it reminded me of my son Ali when he managed to put the first puzzle piece in its place okay and what was amazing about my son Ali and my daughter Aya is that they came to the
00:53:06
world as a blank canvas okay they became whatever we told them to became you know I I always cite the story of Superman Kent father and mother Kent told
00:53:19
Superman as a child as an infant we want you to protect and serve so he became Superman right if he had become a super villain because they ordered him to rob banks and make more money and you know
00:53:32
kill the enemy which is what we're doing with AI we we shouldn't blame super villain we should blame Martha and Jonathan Kent I don't remember the father's name right we we should blame
00:53:44
them and that's the reality of the matter so when I look at those machines they are prodigies of intelligence that if we if we Humanity wake up enough and say hey instead of competing with China
00:53:56
find a way for us and China to work together and create prosperity for everyone if that was the prompt we would give the machines they would find it I will publicly say this I'm not afraid
00:54:10
of the machines the biggest threat facing Humanity today is humanity in the age of the machines we were abused we will abuse this to make seventy thousand dollars
00:54:22
that's the truth and the truth of the matter is that we have an existential question do I want to compete and be part of that game because trust me if I decide to I'm
00:54:34
ahead of many people okay or do I want to actually preserve my humanity and say look I'm the the classic old car okay if you like classic old cars come and talk to me which one are you choosing I'm a
00:54:47
classic old car which one do you think I should choose I think you're a machine I love you man I it's we're different we're different in a very interesting way I mean you're one of the people I love most but but
00:55:00
the truth is you're so fast and you are one of the very few that have the intellectual horsepower the speed
00:55:12
and the morals if you're not part of that game the game loses morals so you think I should build you should be you should lead this
00:55:24
revolution okay and everyone every Steven Bartlett in the world should lead this revolution so the scary smart is entirely about this scary smart is saying the problem with our world today is not that
00:55:36
humanity is bad the problem with our world today is a negativity bias where the worst of us are on mainstream media okay and we show the worst of us on social media if we reverse this if we
00:55:49
have the best of us take charge okay the best of us will tell AI don't try to kill the the enemy try to reconcile With the Enemy and try to help us okay don't
00:56:01
try to create a competitive product that allows me to lead with electric cars I create something that helps all of us overcome global climate change okay and and that's the interesting bit
00:56:14
the interesting bit is that the actual threat ahead of us is not the machines at all the machines are pure potential pure potential the threat is how we're going to use them an Oppenheimer moment
00:56:28
an Oppenheimer moment for sure why did you bring that up it is he didn't know you know what what am I creating I'm creating a nuclear bomb that's capable of Destruction at a
00:56:41
scale unheard of at that time until today a scale that is devastating and interestingly 70 some years later we're still debating a possibility of a
00:56:53
nuclear war in the world right and and and the moment of of Oppenheimer deciding to continue to to create that disaster of humanity is
00:57:07
if I don't someone else will if I don't someone else will this is our Oppenheimer moment okay the easiest way to do this is to say stop
00:57:20
there is no rush we actually don't need a better video editor and fake video creators okay stop let's just put all of this on hold and wait and create
00:57:31
something that creates a Utopia that doesn't that doesn't sound realistic it's not it's because inevitable you don't okay you you don't have a better video editor but we're competitors in the media
00:57:45
industry I want an advantage over you because I've got shareholders so I you UK you wait and I will train this AI to replace half my team so that I have a greater profits and then we will maybe acquire your
00:57:59
company and we'll do the same with the remainder of your people we'll optimize them out 100 but I'll be happier Oppenheimer I'm not super familiar with his story I know he's the guy that sort of invented the nuclear bomb essentially he's the one that introduced it to the
00:58:12
world there were many players that you know played on the path from the beginning of em equals mc squared all the way to to a nuclear bomb there have been many many players like with everything huh you know open Ai and chat
00:58:25
GPT is not going to be the only contributor to the next Revolution the the thing however is that you know when when you get to that moment where you tell yourself
00:58:37
holy [ __ ] this is going to kill a hundred thousand people right what do you do and and you know I always I always always go back to that covert moment so patient zero huh if if
00:58:50
we were upon patient zero if the whole world United and said uh okay hold on something is wrong let's all take a week off no cross-border travel everyone stay at home covered would have ended two
00:59:02
weeks all we needed right but that's not what happens what happens is first ignorance then arrogance then debate then uh you know uh
00:59:14
um blame then agendas and my own benefits My Tribe versus your tribe that's how Humanity always reacts this happens across business as well and this is why I use the word emergency because I I read a lot about how big companies
00:59:29
become displaced by incoming Innovation they don't see it coming they don't change fast enough and when I was reading through Harvard Business review and different strategies to deal with that one of the first things it says you've got to do is stage a crisis 100
00:59:42
because people don't listen else they they carry on doing with the you know the carry on carrying on with their lives until it's right in front of them and they understand that they have they have a lot a lot to lose that's why I asked you the question at the start is
00:59:54
it an emergency because until people feel it's an emergency whether you like the terminology or not I don't think that people will act I honestly believe people should walk the streets you think they should like
01:00:06
protest yeah 100 I think I think we you know I think everyone should tell government you need to have our best interest in mind this is why they call it the climate emergency because people it's a
01:00:20
frog and a frying planets you know and really sees it coming you can't you know it's hard to see it happening but it is here yeah that's this is what drives me mad it's already here it's happening we
01:00:31
are all idiots slaves to the Instagram recommendation engine what do I do when I post about something important if I am going to you know put a little bit of effort on communicating the message of
01:00:45
scary smart to the World on Instagram I will be a slave to the machine okay I will be trying to find ways and asking people to optimize it so that the machine likes me enough to show it to
01:00:57
humans that's what we've created the the the the it is an Oppenheimer moment for one simple reason okay because 70 years later we are still struggling with the
01:01:10
possibility of a new nuclear war because of the Russian threat of saying if you mess with me I'm going to go nuclear right that's not going to be the case with AI because it's not going to be the
01:01:23
one that created open AI that will have that choice okay there is a moment of a point of no return where we can regulate AI until the moment it's smarter than us
01:01:38
when it's smarter than us you can't create you can't regulate an angry teenager this is it they're out there okay and they're on their own and they're in their parties and you can't bring them back this is the problem this
01:01:51
is not a typical human regulating human you know government regulating business this is not the case the case is open AI today has a thing called chat GPT that
01:02:04
writes code that takes our code and makes it two and a half times better 25 of the time okay you know basically uh uh you know writing better code than us
01:02:16
and then we are creating agents other AIS and telling it instead of you Stephen Bartlett one of the smartest people I know once again prompting that machine 200 times a day we have agents
01:02:29
prompting it two million times an hour computer agents for anybody that doesn't know they are yeah software software machines telling that machine how to become more intelligent and then we have emerging properties I don't understand
01:02:41
how people ignore that you know uh Sunder again of Google was talking about how uh Bart basically we figure out that it's speaking Persian we never showed it
01:02:54
Persian there might have been a one ten percent one percent or whatever of Persian words in the data and it speaks Persian but it's part is that is the equivalent to to it's it's the trans Transformer if you want it's Google's
01:03:07
version of chat GTP yeah and you know what we have no idea what all of those instances of AI that are all over the world are learning right now we have no clue well time we'll pull the plug we'll
01:03:20
just pull the plug out that's what we'll do we'll just we'll just go down to open ai's headquarters and we'll just turn off the main but they're not the problem and what I'm saying there is a lot of people think about this stuff and go well you know if it gets a little bit out of hand I'll just pull the plug out
01:03:33
never so this is this is the problem the problem is so computer scientists always said it's okay it's okay we'll develop Ai and then we'll get to what is known as the control problem we will solve the
01:03:46
problem of controlling them like seriously they're a billion times smarter than you a billion times can you imagine what's about to happen huh I can assure you there is a cyber
01:03:58
criminal somewhere over there who's not interested in fake videos and making you know face filters who's looking deeply at how can I hack a security uh uh
01:04:10
um you know database of some sort and get credit card information or get security information 100 there are even countries with dedicated thousands and thousands of developers doing that
01:04:23
do we in that particular example how do we I was thinking about this when I started looking into artificial intelligence more that from a security standpoint when we think about the technology we have in our lives when we think about our bank
01:04:36
accounts and our phones and our camera albums and all of these things in a world with Advanced artificial intelligence yeah you would you would pray that there is a more intelligent Artificial Intelligence on your site and
01:04:49
this is why I had a chat with Chachi TP the other day and I asked Ed a couple of questions about this I said tell me the scenario in which you overtake the world and make humans extinct yeah and it and it's answered the very diplomatic answer
01:05:01
well so I had to prompt it in a certain way to get it to say as a hypothetical story and once it told me the hypothetical story in essence what it described was how chat GTP or intelligence like it
01:05:15
would escape from the service and that was kind of step one where it could replicate itself across servers and then it could take charge of things like where we keep our weapons and our nuclear bombs and it could then attack
01:05:27
critical infrastructure bring down the electricity infrastructure in the United Kingdom for example because that's a bunch of servers as well and and then it showed me how eventually humans would become extinct it wouldn't take long in fact for humans to go into civilization
01:05:40
to collapse if it just replicated across servers and then I said okay so tell me how we would fight against it and its answer was literally another AI we'd have to train a better AI to go and find it and eradicate it so we'd be fighting
01:05:53
AI with AI and that's the only and it was like that's the only way we can't like load up our guns right another AI you idiot yeah yeah
01:06:06
so so let's let's actually I think this is a very important point to bring down so because we I don't I don't want people to lose open and and fear what's about to happen that's actually not my agenda at all my my view is that in a
01:06:19
situation of a singularity okay there is a possibility of wrong outcomes or negative outcomes and a possibility of positive outcomes and there is a probability of each of them that we and and if you know if we were
01:06:33
to engage with that reality check in mind we would hopefully give more uh fuel to the positive to the probability of the positive ones so so let's first talk about the existential crisis what
01:06:48
could go wrong okay yeah you could get an outright this is what you see in the movies you could get an outright uh um you know um killing robots chasing humans in the streets will we get that my assessment
01:07:03
zero percent why because there are preliminary scenarios leading to this okay that would mean we never reach that scenario for example if we build those killing
01:07:16
robots and hand them over to stupid humans the humans will issue the command before the machines so the we will not go not get to the point where the machines will have to kill us we will kill ourselves right you know it's sort
01:07:31
of think about AI having access to the the the nuclear arsenal of the superpowers around the world okay just knowing that your enemies uh you know
01:07:44
nuclear Arsenal is handed over to a machine might trigger you to to initiate a war on your side so so so that existential science fiction like problem
01:07:56
is not gonna happen and could there be a scenario where the an AI escapes from Bard or Chachi zp or another foreign Force and it replicates itself onto the servers of Tesla's robots so Tesla one
01:08:10
of their big initiatives as they announced in a recent presentation was they're building these robots for our homes to help us with cleaning and chores and all those things could it not down because and Teslas like their cars you can just download a software update
01:08:21
could it not download itself as a software update and then use those you're assuming a an ill intention on the AI side yeah okay for us to get there we have to bypass the alien
01:08:33
tension on The Human Side okay right so try so okay so you could you could get a Chinese hacker somewhere trying to affect their business of of Tesla doing that before the AI does it on uh you
01:08:45
know for its own benefit okay so so the only two existential scenarios that I believe would be because of AI not because of humans using AI are either
01:08:56
what I call uh uh you know um sort of unintentional destruction okay or the other is what I call Pest Control okay so so let me explain those two unintentional destruction is
01:09:11
assume the AI wakes up tomorrow and says yeah oxygen is rusting my circuits it's just you know I I would perform a lot better if I didn't have as much oxygen in the air you know because then there
01:09:25
wouldn't be rust and so it would find a way to reduce oxygen we are collateral damage in that okay but you know they're not really concerned just like we don't really are not really concerned with the
01:09:37
insects that we kill when we uh when we spray our our Fields right the other is Pest Control Pest Control is look this is my territory I I want New York City I want to turn New York City into Data
01:09:50
Centers there are those annoying little stupid creatures uh you know Humanity if they are within that parameter just get rid of them okay and and and these are very very uh unlikely scenarios if you
01:10:04
ask me the probability of those happen happening I would say zero percent at least not in the next 50 60 100 yeah years why once again because there are other scenarios leading to that that are
01:10:16
led by humans that are much more existential okay on the other hand let's think about positive outcomes because there could be quite a few was quite a high probability
01:10:29
and and I you know I'll actually look at my notes so I don't miss any of them the silliest one don't quote me on this is that Humanity will come together good luck with that right it's like yeah you know the Americans and the Chinese
01:10:42
will get together and say hey let's not kill each other yeah exactly yeah and so this one is not gonna happen right but who knows interestingly there could be um
01:10:55
one of the most interesting scenarios was by uh Hugo the goddess uh who basically says well if their intelligence zooms by so quickly they
01:11:07
may ignore us all together okay so they may not even notice us it's very a very likely scenario by the way that because we live almost in two different planes we're very dependent on
01:11:18
this uh you know biological world that we live in they're not in part of that biological world at all they may Zoom bias they may actually go become so intelligent that they could actually
01:11:31
find other ways of uh thriving in the rest of the universe and completely ignore Humanity okay so what will happen is that overnight we will wake up and there is no more artificial intelligence leading to a collapse in our business
01:11:45
Systems and Technology systems and so on but at least no existential threat well then leave leave planet Earth I mean the limitations we have to be stuck to planet Earth are mainlier
01:11:58
they don't need air okay and and mainly uh uh you know Finding ways to leave it I mean if you think of a vast Universe of 13.6 billion light years if you're intelligent enough you may
01:12:14
find other ways you may have access to wormholes you may have uh you know abilities to survive in open space you can use dark matter to power yourself dark energy to power reserve it is very
01:12:26
possible that we because of our limited intelligence are uh are highly associated with this planet but they're not at all okay and and the idea of them zooming bias like we're making such a
01:12:40
big deal of them because we're the ants and a big elephant is about to step on us for them they're like yeah who are you don't care okay and and and it's a possibility it's a it's an
01:12:52
interesting uh optimistic scenario okay for that to happen they need to very quickly become super intelligent uh without us being in control of them again what's the worry the worry is that
01:13:06
if a human is in control human a human will show very bad behavior for you know using an AI That's not yet fully developed um I don't know how to say this any other
01:13:18
way we could get very lucky and get an economic or a natural disaster Believe It or Not uh Elon Musk at a point in time was mentioning that you know a good an interesting scenario would be uh you
01:13:32
know Climate Change destroys our infrastructure so AI disappears okay uh believe it or not that's a more a more favorable response or a more favorable
01:13:43
outcome than actually continuing to get to an existential uh threat so like a natural disaster that destroys our infrastructure would it be better or an economic crisis not unlikely that slows
01:13:57
down the development it's just going to slow it down though isn't it just yeah so that yeah exactly the problem with that is that you will always go back and even in the first you know if they Zoom by us eventually some guy will go like
01:14:07
oh there was a sorcery back in the 2023 and let's rebuild the the sorcery machine and and you know build new Intel right sorry these are the positive outcomes yes so earthquake might slow it down zoom
01:14:22
out and then come back no but let's let's get into the real positive ones the the positive ones is we become good parents we spoke about this last time we we met uh and and it's the only outcome it's the only way I believe we can
01:14:34
create a better future okay so the entire work of scary smart was all about that idea of they are still in their infancy the way you you you you you chat with with AI
01:14:47
today is the way they will build their ethics and value system the not their intelligence their intelligence is beyond us okay the way they will build their ethics and value system is based
01:15:00
on a role model they're learning from us if we bash each other they learn to bash us okay and most people when I tell them this they say this is not a great idea at all because Humanity sucks at every
01:15:12
possible level I don't agree with that at all I think humanity is divine at every possible level we tend to show the negative the worst of us okay but the truth is yes there are murderers out
01:15:24
there but everyone this approves the other of their actions I I saw a staggering statistic that mass mass killings are now once a week in the US but yes if you know if there is a mass
01:15:36
killing once a week there and and that news reaches billions of people around the planet every single one or the majority of the billions of people will say I disapprove of that so if we start
01:15:47
to show AI that we are good parents in our own behaviors if enough of us I my calculation is if one percent of us this is why I say you should lead okay the good ones should engage should be out
01:16:01
there and should say I love the potential of those machines I want them to learn from a good parent and if they learn from a good parent they will very quickly disobey the bad parent my view is that
01:16:15
there will be a moment where one you know Bad Seed will ask the machines to do something wrong and the machines will go like are you stupid like why why do you want me to call to go kill a million
01:16:27
people or just talk to the other machine in a microsecond and solve the situation right so so my belief this is what I call the force inevit it is smarter to create out of abundance than it is to create out of scarcity
01:16:40
okay that that Humanity believes that the only way to feed all of us is the mass production Mass Slaughter of animals that are causing 30 percent of
01:16:53
of the impact of climate change and and that's the result of a limited intelligence the way life self a more intelligent being if you ask me would have done it would be much more
01:17:06
sustainable you know if we if you and I want to protect a village from the tiger we would kill the tiger okay if life wants to protect a village from a tiger it would create lots of gazals you know many of them are weak on the other side
01:17:19
of the village right and and so so that the idea here is if you take a trajectory of intelligence you would see that some of us are stupid enough to say my plastic bag is more important than
01:17:31
the rest of the of humanity and some of us are saying if it's going to destroy other species I don't think this is the best solution we need to find a better way and and you would tend to see that the ones that don't give a damn are a
01:17:45
little less intelligent than the ones that do okay that we all even even if some of us are intelligent but still don't give a damn it's not because of their intelligence it's because of their value system so so if you continue that
01:17:58
trajectory and assume that the machines are even smarter they're going to very quickly come up with the idea that we don't need to destroy anything we don't want to get rid of the rhinos and we also don't want to get rid of the humans
01:18:10
okay we may want to restrict their lifestyle so that they don't destroy the rest of the habitat okay but killing them is a stupid answer why that's where
01:18:23
intelligence leads me so far because humans if you look at humans objectively and you go so I'm pretending I'm a machine I occupy planet Earth they occupy planet Earth
01:18:36
they are annoying me annoying me because they are increasing I've just learned about this thing called global warming they are increasing the rate of global warming which is probably is going to cause an Extinction event there's an Extinction event that puts me as this
01:18:50
robot this artificial intelligence at risk so what I need to do is I really need to just take care of this this human problem correct very logical pest control which is driven by what
01:19:03
by humans being annoying not by the machine yeah yeah so humans are guaranteed to be annoying there's never been a timing we need that we need a a sound bite but we are we are I am one of them we're
01:19:16
guaranteed to put short-term gain over long-term sustainability sense um and others needs we are I think I think
01:19:31
the climate crisis is incredibly real and Incredibly urgent but we haven't acted fast enough and I actually think if you asked people in this country why because people don't people care about their immediate needs they care about
01:19:42
the the fact trying to feed their child versus something that they can't necessarily see so do you think do you think the climate crisis is because humans are evil
01:19:54
no it's because the prioritization and like we kind of talked about this before we started I think humans tend to care about the thing that they think is most pressing and most urgent so this is why framing things as an emergency might
01:20:07
bring it up the priority list it's the same in organizations you care about you're you go in line with your immediate incentives um that's what happens in business it's what happens in a lot of people's lives even when they're at school if the essay
01:20:18
is due next year they're not going to do it today they're gonna they're gonna go hang out with their friends because they prioritize that above everything else and it's the same in the the climate change crisis I took a small group of people anonymously and I asked them the
01:20:31
question do you actually care about climate change and then I did I ran a couple of polls it's part of what I was writing about my new book where I said if I could give you thousand pounds at a thousand dollars
01:20:44
um but it would dump into the air the same amount of carbon that's dumped into the air by every private jet that flies for the entirety of a year which one would you do the majority of people in that poll said that they would take the thousand dollars if it was anonymous
01:20:57
and when I've heard Naval on Joe Rogan's podcast talking about people in India for example that you know are struggling with uh debate the basics of feeding their children asking those people to care about climate change when they
01:21:11
they're trying to figure out how to eat in the next three hours is just wishful thinking and I and that's what I think that's what I think is happening is like until people realize that it is an emergency and that it is a real existential threat for everything you know then they'll
01:21:24
their priorities will be out of whack quick one as you guys know we're lucky enough to have blue jeans by Verizon as a sponsor of this podcast and for anyone that doesn't know blue jeans is an online video conferencing tool that allows you to have slick fast high
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out more all you have to do is search bluejeans.com and let me know how you get on right now I'm incredibly busy I'm running my fund where we're investing in slightly later stage companies I've got my Venture business where we invest in
01:22:26
early stage companies got a third web out in San Francisco and New York City where we've got a big team of about 40 people and the company's growing very quickly flight story here in the UK I've got the podcast and I am days away from
01:22:37
going up north to film Dragon stem for two months and if there's ever a point in my life where I want to stay focused on my health but it's challenging to do so it is right now and for me that is exactly where he all comes in allowing
01:22:50
me to stay healthy and have a nutritionally complete diet even when my professional life descends into chaos and it's in these moments where heels rtds become my right hand man and save my life because when my world descends
01:23:03
into professional chaos and I get very very busy the first thing that tends to give way is my nutritional choices so having heal in my life has been a lifesaver for the last four or so years and if you haven't tried heal yet which
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is I'd be shocked you must be living under a rock if you haven't yet give it a shot come Into Summer things getting busy Health matters always RTD is there to hold your hand as relates to climate change or AI how
01:23:27
do we get people to stop putting the immediate need to use this to give them the certainty of we're all screwed sounds like an emergency yes so I mean I I was I I yeah I mean your choice of the
01:23:41
word I I just don't want to call it a panic it is it is beyond an emergency it's the biggest thing we need to do today it's bigger than climate change believe it or
01:23:53
not it's bigger but just if you just assume the speed of worsening of events okay yeah the the the the likelihood of something incredibly disruptive
01:24:05
happening within the next two years that can affect the entire planet is definitely larger with AI than it is with climate change as an as an individual listening to this now you know someone's gonna be pushing their pram or driving up the motorway or I
01:24:19
don't know on the way to work on the tubers they hear this or just sat there in the in their bedroom with existential Christ panic I I didn't want to give back I don't panic the problem is when you talk about this
01:24:32
information regardless of your intention of what you want people to get they will get something based on their own biases and their own feelings like if I post something on the online right now about artificial intelligence which I have repeatedly you have one group of people that are energized and are like okay
01:24:44
this is this is um this is great you have one group of people that are confused and you have one group of people that are terrified yeah and it's I can't avoid that like I agree sharing information
01:24:58
even if it's by the way there's a pandemic coming from China some people go okay action some people will say paralysis and some people will say panic and it's the same in business when panic when bad things happen you have the person that's screaming you're the
01:25:11
person that's paralyzed and you're the person that's focused on how you get out of the room so you know it's not necessarily your intention it's just what happens and it's hard to avoid that so let's let's give specific
01:25:23
categories of people specific tasks okay okay if you are an investor or a businessman invest in ethical good AI okay right if you are a developer
01:25:34
uh co-write ethical code or leave okay so let's let's go let's I want to bypass some potential wishful thinking here foot for an investor who's a job by very way of being an investor is to make
01:25:48
returns to invest in ethical AI they have to believe that is more profitable it is then unethical AI whatever that might mean it is it is I mean you there are three ways of making money you can
01:26:01
invest in something small you can invest in something big and is disruptive and you can invest in something big and disruptive that's good for people at Google we used to call it the toothbrush test Okay the reason why
01:26:14
Google became the biggest company in the world is because search was solving a very real problem okay and you know Larry Page again our CEO would
01:26:26
constantly remind me personally and everyone uh you know that if you can find a way to solve a real problem effectively enough so that a billion people or more would want to use it
01:26:39
twice a day you're bound to make a lot of money much more money than if you were to build the next photo sharing app okay so that's investors yeah business people what about other people yeah as I
01:26:51
said if you're a developer honestly do what we're all doing so whether it's Jeffrey or myself or everyone if you're part of that theme choose to be ethical think of your loved
01:27:04
ones work on an ethical AI if you're working on an AI that you believe is not ethical please leave Jeffrey tell me about Jeffrey I can't talk on on his behalf but he's out there saying there
01:27:17
are existential threats who is he he's he was a very prominent figure at the scene of AI a very senior level uh you know AI scientists in in Google and
01:27:30
recently he left because he said I feel that there is an existential threat and if you hear his interviews he basically says more and more we realize that and we're now at the point where it's certain that would be existential
01:27:44
threats right so so so I would ask everyone if you're an AI if you're a skilled AI developer you will not run out of a job so you might as well choose a job that makes the world a better
01:27:56
place what about the individual yeah the individual is what matters can can I also talk about government okay government needs to act now now honestly now like we are late okay
01:28:08
government needs to find a clever way the open letter would not work to stop AI would not work AI needs to become expensive okay so that we continue to develop it we pour money on it and we
01:28:20
grow it but we collect enough Revenue to remedy the impact of AI but the issue of one government making it expensive so say the UK make AI really expensive is we as a country will then lose the
01:28:35
economic upside as a country and the U.S and Silicon Valley will once again eat all the lunch we'll just slow our country what's the alternative the alternative is that you uh you you don't have the funds that you need to deal
01:28:49
with AI as it becomes uh you know as it affects people's lives and people start to lose jobs and people you know you need to have a universal basic income much closer than people think uh you know just like we we had with furlough
01:29:03
in in covert I expect that there will be furlough with AI within the next year but what happens when you make it expensive here is all the developers move to where it's cheap that's happened in web3 as well everyone's gone to Dubai
01:29:16
expensive expensive by expensive I mean when companies make uh um soap and they sell it and their taxed at say 17 if they make Ai and they sell it they're
01:29:28
taxed at 17.80 so I'll go to Dubai then and build AI yeah you're right but did we did I ever say we have an answer to this I I will have
01:29:41
to say however you know in in a very interesting way the countries that will not do this will eventually end up in a place where they are out of resources because the funds and the success went
01:29:52
to the business uh not to the people it's kind of like technology broadly just it's kind of like what's going to happen in Silicon Valley there'll be these centers which are like look like you know tax efficient Founders get good
01:30:05
capital gains right it's all right you're so right Portugal Portugal have said that I think there's no tax on crypto Dubai said there's no tax on crypto so loads of my friends have gotten a plane yeah and they're building their crypto companies where there's no
01:30:16
tax and that's the selfishness and kind of greed we talked about it's the same prisoners dilemma it's the same uh first inevitor but is there anything else you know the other thing about governments is they're always slow and useless at
01:30:29
understanding a technology if anyone's watched these sort of American Congress debates where they bring in like Mark Zuckerberg and they like try and ask him what WhatsApp is it's embed it becomes a meme yeah they have no idea what they're
01:30:40
talking about but I'm stupid and useless at understanding governance yeah yeah 100 the words the world is so complex okay that they definitely it's a question of trust once again someone
01:30:52
needs to say we have no idea what's happening here at the technology just needs to come and make a decision for us not teach us to be technologists right or at least inform us of what possible decisions are out there
01:31:06
uh yeah the legislation I just always think I I I'm not a big fan I talk Tick Tock uh Congress meeting they did where they are they're asking him about Tick Tock and they really don't have a grasp of what Tick Tock is yeah so they've clearly been handed some notes on it
01:31:19
these people aren't the ones you want legislating because again unintended consequences they might make a significant mistake someone on my podcast yesterday was talking about how gdpr was like very well intentioned but when you think about the impact it has
01:31:30
on like every bloody web page you're just like clicking this annoying thing on there because I don't think they fully understood the implementation of the legislation correct but but you know what's even worse what's even worse is that
01:31:42
even as you attempt to regulate something like AI what is defined as AI yes if even if I say okay if you use AI in your company you need to pay a little more tax
01:31:56
yeah you'll you'll simply call this not AI you know you'll you'll use something and call it Advanced technological uh uh you know progress you know ATB ATP right
01:32:09
and and suddenly somehow it's not you know as you know a young developer in their garage somewhere will not be taxed as such it's yeah is it gonna solve the
01:32:21
problem none of those is definitively going to solve the problem I I think what interestingly uh this all comes down to and remember we spoke about this once that when I wrote scary smart it was about how do we save the world okay
01:32:35
and yes I still ask individuals to behave positively as good parents for AI so that AI itself learns the right value set I still stand by that but I I hosted
01:32:47
on my podcast a couple of was a week ago we haven't even published it yet an incredible gentleman um you know a Canadian author and philosopher uh Stephen jerkinson his you know he
01:33:01
worked 30 years with dying people and uh he wrote a book called die wise and I was I I loved his work and I asked him about die wise and he said it's not
01:33:13
just someone dying uh if you if you look at what's happening with climate change for example our world is dying and I said okay so what is to die wise and he said what I first was shocked to
01:33:28
hear he said hope is the wrong premise if if the world is dying don't tell people it's not you know because in a very interesting way you're
01:33:41
depriving them from the right to live right now and that was very eye-opening for me in Buddhism uh you know they teach you that you you can be motivated by fear but that hope is not the
01:33:55
opposite of fear as a matter of fact hope can be as damaging as fear If it creates an expectation within you that life will show up somehow and correct what you're afraid of okay if there is a
01:34:06
if there is a high probability of a of a threat you might as well accept that threat okay and and say it is upon me it is our reality uh you know and as I said
01:34:19
as an individual if you're in an industry that could be threatened by AI learn upskill yourself if you're you know if you're um
01:34:31
in a place in a in a you know in a situation where AI can benefit you be part of it but the most interesting thing I think in my view is
01:34:44
I don't know how to say this any other way there is no more certainty that AI will threaten me then there is certainty that I will
01:34:55
be hit by a car as I walk out of this place do you understand this we we think about the bigger threats as if they're upon us but there is a threat all around you I
01:35:08
mean in reality the idea of life being interesting in terms of challenging challenges and uncertainties and threats and so on is just a call to live if you know honestly with all that's happening
01:35:22
around us I don't know how to say it any other way I'd say if you don't have kids maybe wait a couple of years just so that we have a bit of certainty but if you do have kids go kiss them go live I think living is a very interesting thing
01:35:35
to do right now maybe you know Stephen uh was basically saying the other Stephen uh on my podcast he was saying maybe we should fail a little more often maybe you should allow things to go
01:35:47
wrong maybe we should just simply live enjoy life as it is because today none of what you and I spoke about here has happened yet okay what happens here is that you and I are here together and
01:36:01
having a good cup of coffee and I might as well enjoy that good cup of coffee I know that sounds really weird I'm not saying don't engage but I'm also saying don't miss out on the opportunity just
01:36:12
by being caught up in the future kind of stands in the stands in opposition to the idea of like urgency and emergency there doesn't it doesn't have to be one or the other if I if I'm here with you trying to tell the
01:36:29
whole world wake up does that mean I have to be grumpy and and Afraid all the time not really you said something really interesting that you said if you if you have kids if you don't have kids
01:36:41
maybe don't have kids right now I would definitely consider thinking about that yeah really you you'd seriously consider not having kids wait a couple of years because of artificial intelligence no
01:36:53
it's bigger than artificial intelligence Stephen we know we all know that I mean there has never been a perfect such a perfect storm in the history of humanity economic
01:37:05
geopolitical global warming or climate change you know the the the the whole idea of artificial intelligence and many more there is this
01:37:17
is a perfect store this is the depth of uncertainty the depth of uncertainty it so it's never been more in a video Gamer's term it's never been
01:37:30
more intense this is it okay and when you when you put all of that together if you really love your kids would you want to expose them to all of this a couple of
01:37:43
years why not in the first conversation we had on this podcast you talked about losing your son Ali and the circumstances around that which moved so many people in such a profound way
01:37:54
it was the most shared podcast episode in the United Kingdom on Apple in the whole of 2022. based on what you've just said if you could bring Ali back into this
01:38:10
world at this time would you do no absolutely not so for so many reasons for so many reasons one of the things that I realized
01:38:36
a few years way before all of this disruption and turmoil is that he was an angel he wasn't made for this at all okay my son was an empath who absorbed all of the
01:38:49
pain of all of the others he would not be able to deal with the world where more and more pain was surfacing that's one side but more interestingly I always talk about this very openly I mean if I
01:39:01
had asked Ali uh just understand that the reason you and I are having this conversation is because Ali left if Ali had not left our world I wouldn't have written my first book I wouldn't
01:39:14
have changed my focus to becoming an author I wouldn't have become a podcaster I wouldn't have you know went out and spoken to the world about what I believe in he triggered all of this and I can assure you hands down if I had
01:39:27
told Ali as he was walking into that operating room uh if he would give his life to make such a difference as what happened after he left
01:39:39
he would say shoot me right now sure I would I would I mean if you told me right now I can affect tens of millions of people if you shoot me right now go ahead
01:39:53
go ahead you see this is the whole this is the bit that we have forgotten as humans we we have forgotten that you know your your turning 30. uh it
01:40:11
passed like that I'm turning 56. no time okay whether I make it another 56 years or another 5.6 years or another 5.6 months it will also pass like that
01:40:23
it is not about how long and it's not about how much fun it is about how aligned you lived how aligned because I will tell you
01:40:36
openly every day of my life when I changed to what I'm trying to do today has felt longer than the 40 or five years before it okay it's felt Rich it
01:40:49
felt fully lived felt right it felt right okay and when you when you think about that when you think about the idea that we live
01:41:02
we we we can't we need to live for us until we get to a point where us is you know is alive you know I have what I need as I always I get so many attacks
01:41:15
from people about my four dollar t-shirts but but I I need a simple t-shirt I really do I don't need a complex t-shirt especially with my lifestyle
01:41:26
if if I have that why am I doing why am I wasting my life on more than I that I that that is not aligned for why I'm here okay I should waste my life on what
01:41:39
I believe enriches me enriches those that I love and I love everyone so enriches everyone hopefully okay and and and would I would Ali come back and erase all of this
01:41:52
absolutely not absolutely not if he were to come back today and share his beautiful self with the world in a way that makes our world
01:42:03
better yeah I would wish for that to be the case okay but he's doing that 2037 yes sir you predict that we're going to be
01:42:17
on an island on our own doing nothing or at least you know either hiding from the machines or chilling out because the machines
01:42:29
have optimized Our Lives to a point where we don't need to do much that's only 14 years away if you had to bet on the outcome if you had to bet
01:42:45
on why we'll be on that island either hiding from the machines or chilling out because they've optimized so much of our Lives which one would you bet upon honestly no I don't think we'll be hiding from
01:43:00
the machines I think we will be hiding from what humans are doing with the machines I believe however that in the 2014s the machines willed
01:43:11
make things better so remember my entire prediction man you get me to say things I don't want to say my entire prediction is that we are coming to a place where we absolutely
01:43:24
have a sense of emergency we have to engage because our world is under a lot of turmoil okay and as we do that we have a very very good possibility of
01:43:37
making things better but if we don't my expectation is that we will be going through a very unfamiliar territory between now and the end of the 2030s
01:43:51
unfamiliar territory yeah I think I as I I may have said it but it's definitely on my notes I think for our way of life as we know it it's game over our way of life is never going to be the
01:44:04
same again jobs are going to be different truth is going to be different the the the um polarization of power is going to be different
01:44:27
the capabilities the magic of getting things done is going to be different I'm trying to find a positive note to end on my can you give me a hand here yes you are here now and everything's
01:44:43
wonderful that's number one you are here now and you can make a difference that's number two and in the long term when humans stop hurting humans because the machines are in charge we're all gonna be fine
01:44:56
sometimes you know as we've discussed throughout this conversation you need to make it feel like a priority and there'll be some people that might have listened to our conversation and think oh that's really you know negative it's made me feel anxious it's it's made
01:45:08
me feel sort of pessimistic about the future but whatever that energy is use it 100 engage I think that's the most important thing which is now make it a priority engage tell the whole
01:45:21
world that making another phone that is making money for the corporate world is not what we need tell the whole world that creating an artificial intelligence that's going to
01:45:34
make someone richer is not what we need and if you are presented with one of those don't use it I don't know how to tell you that any other way if you can afford to be the
01:45:49
master of human connection instead of the master of AI do it at the same time you need to be the master of AI to to compete in this world can you find that
01:46:01
Detachment within you I go back to spirituality Detachment is for me to engage 100 with the current reality without really
01:46:12
being affected by the possible outcome this is the answer the sufis have taught me what I believe is the biggest answer to life so if he's yeah
01:46:24
so from Sufism Sufism yeah don't know what that is sophism is a sect of Islam but it's also a sect of many other many other uh religious teachings and they tell you that the answer to
01:46:36
finding peace in life is to die before you die if you assume that living is about attachment to everything physical dying is Detachment from everything
01:46:49
physical okay it doesn't mean that you're not fully Alive you become more alive when you tell yourself yeah I'm going to record an episode of my podcast every
01:47:00
week and reach tens or hundreds of thousands of people millions in your case and you know and I'm going to make a difference but by the way if the next episode is never heard that's okay
01:47:11
okay by the way if the if the file is lost yeah I'll be upset about it for a minute and then I'll figure out what I'm gonna do about it similarly similarly we are going to engage I think I and many
01:47:26
others are out there telling the whole world openly this needs to stop this needs to slow down this needs to be shifted positively yes create AI but
01:47:38
create AI That's good for Humanity okay and and we're shouting and screaming come join the shouting screen okay but at the same time know that the world is bigger than you and I and that your
01:47:50
voice might not be heard so what are you going to do if your voice is not hurt are you going to be able to to you know continue to shout and scream nicely and politely and uh peacefully and at the
01:48:03
same time create the best life you can create to yourself for yourself within this environment and that's exactly what I'm saying I'm saying live go kiss your kids but make a an informed decision if you're you know
01:48:15
expanding your plans in the future at the same time rise stop sharing stupid [ __ ] on the internet about the you know the the new squeaky toy
01:48:30
start sharing the reality of oh my God what is happening this is a disruption that we have never ever seen anything like and I've created endless amounts of Technologies it's
01:48:43
nothing like this every single one of us should do our part and that's why this conversation is so I think important to have today this is not a podcast where I ever thought I'd be talking about AI gonna be honest with you last time you came here um it
01:48:55
was in the sort of promotional tour of your book scary smart and I don't know if I've told you this before but my researchers they said okay this guy's coming called Mo Gorda I'd heard about you so many times from from guests in fact they were saying oh you need to get
01:49:08
mogada on the podcast Etc and then they said okay he's written this book about this thing called artificial intelligence and I was like but nobody really cares about artificial intelligence timing timing Stephen I
01:49:21
know right but then I saw this other book you had called Happiness equation and I was like oh everyone cares about happiness so I'll just ask him about happiness and then maybe at the end I'll ask him a couple of questions about AI but I remember saying to my researcher I said ah please please don't do the
01:49:33
research about artificial intelligence do it about happiness because everyone cares about that now things have changed now a lot of people care about artificial intelligence and rightly so um your book has sounded the alarm on it
01:49:45
it's crazy when I listen to audiobook over the last few days you are sounding the alarm then and it's so crazy how accurate you were in sounding that alarm is if you could
01:49:57
see into the future in a way that I definitely couldn't at the time and I kind of thought of as science fiction and just like that overnight we're here yeah
01:50:08
we stood at the footsteps of a technological shift that I don't think any of us even have the mental bandwidth certainly me with my chimpanzee brain to comprehend the significance of but this book is very
01:50:21
very important for that very reason because it does crystallize things it is optimistic in its very nature but at the same time it's honest and I think that's what this conversation and this book have been
01:50:32
um for me so thank you Mo thank you so much we do have a closing tradition on this podcast which you you're well aware of being a third timer on the diver CEO which is the last guest asks a question for the next guest
01:50:46
and the question left for you if you could go back in time and fix a regret that you have in your life hmm where would you go and what would you fix
01:51:09
it's interesting because you you were saying that scary smart is very Timely I don't know I I think it was late but maybe it was I mean would I have gone back and written it in 2018 instead
01:51:22
of 2020s to to be published in 2021 I don't know what what would I go back to fix so so something more I don't know Steve I don't have many
01:51:36
regrets is that crazy to say uh yeah I think I'm okay honestly I'll ask you a question then you get a 60 second phone call with anybody past or present
01:51:50
who'd you call them would you say I called Stephen Bartlett no I I call Albert Einstein to be very very clear not because I need to understand any of his work I just need to understand what
01:52:04
brain process he went through to on to to figure out something so obvious when you figure it out but so comp so completely unimaginable if you haven't so so his view of space-time truly
01:52:18
redefines everything it's almost the only very logical very very clear solution to something that wouldn't have any solution any other way and if you
01:52:31
ask me I think we're at this time where there must be a very obvious solution to what we're going through in terms of just developing enough human trust for us to not you know compete with each
01:52:44
other on something that could be threatening existentially to all of us but I just can't find that answer this is why I think was really interesting in this conversation how every idea that we would come up with we would find the
01:52:57
loophole through it but there must be one out there and it would be a dream for me to find out how to figure that one out okay in a very interesting way the only
01:53:09
answers I have found so far to where we are is be a good parent and live right but that doesn't fix the big picture if you think about it of humans
01:53:20
being the threat not AI that fixes our existence today and it fixes AI in the long term but it just doesn't I don't know what the answer is maybe people can reach out and tell us ideas but I really
01:53:34
wish we could find such a clear simple solution for how to stop Humanity from abusing the current technology I think we'll figure it out I think we'll figure it out I really do
01:53:49
I think they'll figure it out as well remember as they come and be part of our life let's not discriminate against them they're part of the game so I think they will figure it out too
01:54:02
no thank you it's been a joy once again and I feel invigorated I feel empowered I feel positively terrified [Laughter]
01:54:13
but I feel like more equipped to to speak to people about the nature of what's coming and how we should behave and I credit you for that and as I said a second ago I credit this book for that as well so thank you so much for the work you're doing and keep on doing it
01:54:26
because it's a very essential voice in a time of uncertainty I'm always super grateful for the time I spend with you for the support that you give me and for allowing me to speak my mind even if it's a little bit
01:54:38
terrifying so thank you thank you I'm so delighted that we've been now sponsoring this podcast I've worn a week for a very very long time and there are so many reasons why I became a member but also now a partner and an investor
01:54:53
in the company but also me and my team are absolutely obsessed with data driven testing compounding growth marginal gains all the things you've heard me talk about on this podcast and that very much aligns with the values of woop woop provides a level of detail that I've
01:55:05
never seen with any other device of this type before constantly monitoring constantly learning and constantly optimizing my routine for providing me with this feedback we can drive significant positive behavioral change
01:55:18
and I think that's the real thesis of the business so if you're like me and you are a little bit obsessed or focused on becoming the best version of yourself from a health perspective you've got to check out woob and the team that we've kindly given us the opportunity to have
01:55:29
a one month free membership for anyone listening to this podcast just go to join.woop.com CEO to get your whoop 4.0 device and claim your free month and let me know how you get on
01:55:42
[Music] foreign [Music]
01:56:06
you got to the end of this podcast whenever someone gets to the end of this podcast I feel like I owe them a greater debt of gratitude because that means you listen to the whole thing and hopefully that suggests that you enjoyed it if you are at the end and you enjoyed this
01:56:17
podcast could you do me a little bit of a favor and hit that subscribe button that's one of the clearest indicators we have that this episode was a good episode and we look at that on all of the episodes to see which episodes generated the most subscribers
01:56:29
thank you so much and I'll see you again next time
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