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The problem with artificial intelligence?

Elon Musk and Apple’s co-founder Steve Wozniak have recently signed a letter calling for a six-month moratorium on the development of AI systems. The goal is to give society time to adapt to what the signatories describe as an “AI summer”, which they believe will ultimately benefit humanity, as long as the right guardrails are put in place. These guardrails include rigorously audited safety protocols.

It is a laudable goal, but there is an even better way to spend these six months: retiring the hackneyed label of “artificial intelligence” from public debate. The term belongs to the same scrapheap of history that includes “iron curtain”, “domino theory” and “Sputnik moment”. It survived the end of the cold war because of its allure for science fiction enthusiasts and investors. We can afford to hurt their feelings.

In reality, what we call “artificial intelligence” today is neither artificial nor intelligent. The early AI systems were heavily

— source theguardian.com | Evgeny Morozov | 30 Mar 2023

[That is true, about today’s neural-network systems. However, generalizing that into a prediction of impossibility for all kinds of technology is likely to be mistaken. If something isn’t impossible for known reasons, the prediction that it can’t be done is likely to be falsified some day. – rms]

Nullius in verba