New Delhi: To underscore the revolutionary aspects and risks of artificial intelligence, Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen delivered a speech to parliament on Wednesday that was partly written by AI chatbot ChatGPT.
“What I just read here is not from me. Or any other human for that matter,” Frederiksen said abruptly in his speech to legislators, explaining that it was written by ChatGpt.
The Leader said, “Even if it doesn’t always hit the nail on the head in terms of the details of the government’s work schedule and punctuation marks … it is both fascinating and terrifying for what it is capable of.”
Part of Fredriksson’s speech, prepared by ChatGPT, included sentences such as: “Leading a comprehensive government over the past parliamentary year has been an honor and a challenge.”
“We have worked hard to co-operate between all parties and ensure a strong and sustainable future for Denmark,” and “we have taken steps to tackle climate change and ensure a fairer and more inclusive society where All citizens have equal opportunities”. More sentences written by ChatGPT.
“Although we have faced challenges and resistance along the way, I am proud of what we have achieved together in the past parliamentary year.”
EU, US to release draft code of conduct on AI ‘within weeks’ fellow democracies and like-minded nations to subscribe to it.
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said after consultations with EU officials in Sweden, the voluntary code would be “open to all like-minded countries.”
“There is almost always a gap when new technologies emerge,” Blinken said, adding that “it was time for governments and institutions to figure out how to legislate or regulate.”
Margrethe Vestager, European Commission vice-president and technical lead, said the draft could be ready within weeks. She said, “We think it’s really important that citizens can see that democracy can deliver.” He hoped “to do this with my friends in Canada, in the UK, in Japan, in India, in as wide a circle as possible.”
ChatGPT-maker OpenAI cites ‘existential threat’ in call for AI regulation. The makers of ChatGPT-OpenAI have called for regulation of ‘superintendent’ AI, stressing the need for an International Atomic Energy Agency equivalent to protect humanity from the risks posed by rapidly developing artificial intelligence.
OpenAI co-founders Greg Brockman, Ilya Sutskever and CEO Sam Altman asked an international regulator on ways to “inspect systems, require audits, test for compliance with security standards” in a note published on the company’s website. asked to start work. , and place restrictions on the degree of deployment and level of security to reduce the “existential risk” such systems may pose.
“It is conceivable that within the next 10 years, AI systems will exceed expert skill levels in most domains, and perform as much productive activity as one of today’s largest corporations,” the note read.
“In terms of both potential upsides, superintelligence will be more powerful than other technologies with which humanity has had to contend in the past. We may have a dramatically more prosperous future, but we will have to take risks to get there.” have to be managed. Given the potential for existential risk, we simply cannot be reactive.”
(with inputs from agencies)