
""AI is in a very primitive age. We have a lot to do," said Eric Xing, president at Mohamed bin Zayed University of AI (MBZUAI), during a WEF panel discussion."
""The lesson from history about intelligence: you don't need a lot of intelligence to change the world and potentially cause havoc. You can change the world with relatively little intelligence," Harari said, adding that he was not referring to any particular person."
""Performance-wise, there are not enough checkpoints to control and visualize and understand risky points," he said."
Advances in AI promise improved productivity and significant economic impact across finance, healthcare, and other sectors. The rapid pursuit of superintelligence risks societal harm, delusion, and misdirected objectives when AI mirrors human fallibility. AI-driven automation will displace jobs, constrain physical and regulatory resources, and generate technical vulnerabilities that can cascade if components fail. Infrastructure investments in data centers and chips are substantial, making AI abundant but concentrated among major vendors. Current systems lack sufficient checkpoints to control, visualize, and understand risky points, creating oversight and safety gaps that require urgent technical and regulatory remedies.
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