( 9a ) -v-36- UNDATED (Correspondent Jeremy House) “std.” There’s a race underway to build artificial general intelligence. Correspondent Jeremy House reports. [CutID: <Cuts> TECH-COMPANIES-AI-house-v-FRIam.mp3 Time: 36s Title: TECH-COMPANIES-AI-house-v-FRIam Out-cue: std] ———————— VERBATIM: It’s a futuristic vision of machines that are broadly as smart as humans or at least can do many things as well […]
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Tech companies want to build artificial general intelligence. But who decides when AGI is attained?
( 9a ) -v-36- UNDATED (Correspondent Jeremy House) “std.”
There’s a race underway to build artificial general intelligence. Correspondent Jeremy House reports.
[CutID: <Cuts> TECH-COMPANIES-AI-house-v-FRIam.mp3
Time: 36s
Title: TECH-COMPANIES-AI-house-v-FRIam
Out-cue: std]
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VERBATIM: It’s a futuristic vision of machines that are broadly as smart as humans or at least can do many things as well as people can. Achieving such a concept is the driving mission of ChatGPT-maker OpenAI and a priority for elite research wings of tech giants Amazon, Google, Meta and Microsoft. It’s also a cause for concern for the world’s governments. Leading AI scientists published research in the journal Science warning that unchecked AI agents with “long-term planning” skills could pose an existential risk to humanity.