Current:Home > FinanceCorporate, global leaders peer into a future expected to be reshaped by AI, for better or worse -FundSphere
Corporate, global leaders peer into a future expected to be reshaped by AI, for better or worse
View
Date:2025-04-20 16:57:31
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — President Joe Biden and other global leaders have spent the past few days melding minds with Silicon Valley titans in San Francisco, their discussions frequently focusing on artificial intelligence, a technology expected to reshape the world, for better or worse.
But for all the collective brainpower on hand for the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation conference, there were no concrete answers to a pivotal question: Will AI turn be the springboard that catapults humanity to new heights, or the dystopian nightmare that culminates in its demise?
“The world is at an inflection point — this is not a hyperbole,” Biden said Thursday at a CEO summit held in conjunction with APEC. “The decisions we make today are going to shape the direction of the world for decades to come.”
Not surprisingly, most of the technology CEOs who appeared at the summit were generally upbeat about AI’s potential to unleash breakthroughs that will make workers more productive and eventually improve standards of living.
None were more bullish than Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella, whose software company has invested more than $10 billion in OpenAI, the startup behind the AI chatbot ChatGPT.
Like many of his peers, Nadella says he believes AI will turn out to be as transformative as the advent of personal computers were during the 1980s, the internet’s rise during the 1990s and the introduction of smartphones during the 2000s.
“We finally have a way to interact with computing using natural language. That is, we finally have a technology that understands us, not the other way around,” Nadella said at the CEO summit. “As our interactions with technology become more and more natural, computers will increasingly be able to see and interpret our intent and make sense of the world around us.”
Google CEO Sundar Pichai, whose internet company is increasingly infusing its influential search engine with AI, is similarly optimistic about humanity’s ability to control the technology in ways that will make the world a better place.
“I think we have to work hard to harness it,” Pichai said. “But that is true of every other technological advance we’ve had before. It was true for the industrial revolution. I think we can learn from those things.”
The enthusiasm exuded by Nadella and Pichai has been mirrored by investors who have been betting AI will pay off for Microsoft and Google. The accelerating advances in AI are the main reasons why the stock prices of both Microsoft and Google’s corporate parent, Alphabet Inc., have both soared by more than 50% so far this year. Those gains have combined to produce an additional $1.6 trillion in shareholder wealth.
But the perspective from outside the tech industry is more circumspect.
“Everyone has learned to spell AI, they don’t really know what quite to do about it,” said former U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, who is now director of the Hoover Institution at Stanford University. “They have enormous benefit written all over them. They also have a lot of cautionary tales about how technology can be misused.”
Robert Moritz, global chairman of the consulting firm PricewaterhouseCoopers, said there are legitimate concerns about the “Doomsday discussions” centered on the effects of AI, potentially about the likelihood of supplanting the need for people to perform a wide range of jobs.
Companies have found ways to train people who lose their jobs in past waves of technological upheaval, Moritz said, and that will have to happen again or “we will have a mismatch, which will bring more unrest, which we cannot afford to have.”
San Francisco, the host city for APEC, is counting on the multibillion-dollar investments in AI and the expansion of payrolls among startups such as OpenAI and Anthropic to revive the fortunes of a city that’s still struggling to adjust to a pandemic-driven shift that has led to more people working from home.
The existential threat to humanity posed by AI is one of the reasons that led tech mogul Elon Musk to spend some of his estimated fortune of $240 billion to launch a startup called xAI during the summer. Musk had been scheduled to discuss his hopes and fears surrounding AI during the CEO summit with Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff, but canceled Thursday because of an undisclosed conflict.
veryGood! (78445)
Related
- Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
- Erica Ash, comedian and ‘Real Husbands of Hollywood’ and ‘Mad TV’ star, dies at 46
- FCC launches app tests your provider's broadband speed; consumers 'deserve to know'
- Venezuelan migration could surge after Maduro claims election victory
- Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
- The Best Nordstrom Anniversary Sale 2024 Jewelry Deals Under $50: Earrings for $20 & More up to 45% Off
- 'Ugly': USA women's basketball 3x3 must find chemistry after losing opener
- 2024 Olympics: Jordan Chiles’ Parents Have Heartwarming Reaction to Her Fall off the Balance Beam
- North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
- Trial canceled in North Dakota abortion ban lawsuit as judge ponders dismissal
Ranking
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- A New York state police recruit is charged with assaulting a trooper and trying to grab his gun
- US Army soldier accused of selling sensitive military information changes plea to guilty
- New Details on Sinéad O'Connor's Official Cause of Death Revealed
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- US Army soldier accused of selling sensitive military information changes plea to guilty
- Earthquakes happen all the time, you just can't feel them. A guide to how they're measured
- 2024 Olympics: Gymnast Aly Raisman Defends Jade Carey After Her Fall at Paris Games
Recommendation
Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
USAs Regan Smith, Katharine Berkoff add two medals in 100 backstroke
Watch as rescuers save Georgia man who fell down 50-foot well while looking for phone
The top prosecutor where George Floyd was murdered is facing backlash. But she has vowed to endure
Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
Construction company in Idaho airport hangar collapse ignored safety standards, OSHA says
8 US track and field athletes who could win Olympic gold: Noah, Sha'Carri, Sydney and more
Accusing Olympic leaders of blackmail over SLC 2034 threat, US lawmakers threaten payments to WADA