News

Artificial Intelligence labs locked in ‘out of control race’, warn tech leaders

By on

AI experts and business leaders have petitioned AI labs to pause training of systems ‘more powerful than GPT-4’ until risks have been planned for and managed.


GPT-4 is the next iteration of the technology behind ChatGPT, a natural language processing tool driven by AI technology. It is designed to produce human-like text or dialogue and was released on 14 March.

In an open letter signed by leaders including Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak, Twitter CEO Elon Musk, and Yoshua Bengio, founder of AI research institute Mila, it warns that there must be checks on the rate of progress.

“Advanced AI could represent a profound change in the history of life on Earth, and should be planned for and managed with commensurate care and resources,” said the letter published by the Future of Life Institute, a non-profit for mitigating risks of transformative technology. “Unfortunately, this level of planning and management is not happening.”

HSE is expected to draw up guidance for organisations on implementing AI in a safe way. Photograph: iStock

It said that AI labs were locked in an “out-of-control race” to further the technology which even they may not “understand, predict, or reliably control”.

It says there are fundamental questions to ask before the technology is allowed to progress at the speed it is currently going: “Should we let machines flood our information channels with propaganda and untruth? Should we automate away all the jobs, including the fulfilling ones? Should we risk loss of control of our civilization?”

Meanwhile, HSE is expected to draw up guidance for organisations on implementing AI in a safe way according to five principles outlined in a government white paper.

These include safety and robustness, asking that applications of AI should ‘function in a secure, safe and robust way where risks are carefully managed.’

Fairness is another principle, i.e. that AI should be used in a way which complies with the UK’s existing laws, for example, the Equality Act or GDPR.

Legislation may be introduced next year to ensure consistent application of the guidance by regulators. “Given the pace at which AI technologies and risks emerge, and the scale of the opportunities at stake, we know that there is no time to waste if we are to strengthen the UK’s position as one of the best places in the world to start an AI company,” says the paper. “In collaboration with regulators, we are already exploring approaches to implementing the framework and will scale up this activity over the coming months.”

The government is also asking individuals and organisations to respond to its consultation, which runs until 21 June, found at the end of the white paper.

A pro-innovation approach to AI regulation: government's white paper and consultation is open until 21 June. Have your say here

NEWS


Stressed Medic iStock DMP

Calls for more mental health support for NHS workers grow amid burnout fears

By Kerry Reals on 12 April 2024

Calls for the reinstatement of UK government funding for the provision of mental health and wellbeing hubs for NHS workers have amplified, as a new survey by the UNISON union warns that the threat of burnout could compound healthcare staff shortages.



Retail Crime iStock stevecoleimages

Assault of retail workers to become a standalone crime in UK shoplifting crackdown

By Kerry Reals on 10 April 2024

Retailers have welcomed a UK government decision to make assaulting a shop worker a standalone criminal office in England and Wales, but civil liberties groups have criticised plans to ramp up the use of facial recognition technology in town centres to help catch shoplifters.



Sillhouette Woman Depressed Med Istock Credit Simpson33

Teaching union calls for HSE to include suicides in work-related deaths figures

By Kerry Reals on 03 April 2024

Teaching union NASUWT has reiterated calls for suicides to be included in the Health and Safety Executive’s (HSE’s) annual figures on work-related deaths, and is calling for suicide prevention training to be provided for all school leaders.