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AI threatens humanity’s future, 61% of Americans say: Reuters/Ipsos


The swift growth of artificial intelligence technology could put the future of humanity at risk, according to most Americans surveyed in a Reuters/Ipsos poll published on Wednesday.


More than two-thirds of Americans are concerned about the negative effects of AI and 61 per cernt believe it could threaten civilisation. Since OpenAI’s ChatGPT chatbot became the fastest-growing application of all time, the widespread integration of AI into everyday life has catapulted AI to the forefront of public discourse. ChatGPT has kicked off an AI arms race, with tech heavyweights like Microsoft and Google vying to outdo each other’s AI accomplishments.

Lawmakers and AI companies are also concerned: OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, on Tuesday, testified before U.S. Congress, voicing concerns about the potential misuse of the technology and asking for regulation. “There’s no way to put this genie in the bottle. Globally, this is exploding,” said Senator Cory Booker, one of many lawmakers with questions about how best to regulate AI during a Senate panel on the uses of AI on Tuesday.

The Reuters/Ipsos poll found that the number of Americans who foresee adverse outcomes from AI is triple the number of those who don’t.

According to the data, 61 per cent of respondents believe that AI poses risks to humanity, while only 22 per cent disagreed, and 17 per cent remained unsure.

Also read: Threat perception of job loss from AI higher among students: Survey

Those who voted for Donald Trump in 2020 expressed higher levels of concern; 70 per cent of Trump voters compared to 60 per cent of Joe Biden voters agreed that AI could threaten humankind.

When it came to religious beliefs, Evangelical Christians were more likely to “strongly agree” that AI presents risks to humanity, standing at 32 per cent compared to 24 per cent of non-Evangelical Christians. “It’s telling such a broad swatch of Americans to worry about the negative effects of AI,” said Landon Klein, director of U.S. policy of the Future of Life Institute, the organisation behind an open letter, co-signed by Tesla CEO Elon Musk, demanding a six-month pause in AI research. “We view the current moment similar to the beginning of the nuclear era, and we have the benefit of public perception that is consistent with the need to take action.”

While Americans are concerned about AI, crime and the economy rank higher on the list of kitchen table issues: 77 per cent support increasing police funding to fight crime and 82 per cent are worried about the risk of a recession.

Also read: After Elon Musk, India’s CERT-In warns against misuse of AI-based language apps

Those in the industry said the public should understand AI’s benefits more.

“The concerns are very legitimate, but I think what’s missing in the dialogue, in general, is why are we doing this in the first place?” said Sebastian Thrun, a computer science professor at Stanford who founded Google X. “AI will raise peoples’ quality of life, and help people be more competent and more efficient.”

The positive applications of AI, such as revolutionising drug discovery, are not as visible as ChatGPT, said Ion Stoica, a UC Berkeley professor who also co-founded AI company, Anyscale.

“Americans may not realise how pervasive AI already is in their daily lives, both at home and at work,” he said.

The online poll of 4,415 U.S. adults was conducted between May 9 and May 15. It has a credibility interval, a measure of accuracy, of plus or minus 2 percentage points.





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