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Did the US and Israel really obliterate Iran’s nuclear facilities?

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Careers   来源:Strategy  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:Speaking with Fox News, Lutnick said he expects the President to stand firm when that 90 day pause expires at the start of July.

Speaking with Fox News, Lutnick said he expects the President to stand firm when that 90 day pause expires at the start of July.

"We take it as if the future has already been written; that there is an inevitable march to a superhuman replacement," he says."We did not have these conversations enough with the rise of social media, much to our collective detriment. But with AI, it is not too late. We can decide what we want."

Did the US and Israel really obliterate Iran’s nuclear facilities?

But there are some in the tech sector who believe that the AI in our computers and phones may already be conscious, and we should treat them as such.Google suspended software engineer Blake Lemoine in 2022, after he argued that AI chatbots could feel things and potentially suffer.In November 2024, an AI welfare officer for Anthropic, Kyle Fish, co-authored a report suggesting that AI consciousness was a realistic possibility in the near future. He recently told The New York Times that he also believed that there was a small (15%) chance that chatbots are already conscious.

Did the US and Israel really obliterate Iran’s nuclear facilities?

One reason he thinks it possible is that no-one, not even the people who developed these systems, knows exactly how they work. That's worrying, says Prof Murray Shanahan, principal scientist at Google DeepMind and emeritus professor in AI at Imperial College, London."We don't actually understand very well the way in which LLMs work internally, and that is some cause for concern," he tells the BBC.

Did the US and Israel really obliterate Iran’s nuclear facilities?

According to Prof Shanahan, it's important for tech firms to get a proper understanding of the systems they're building – and researchers are looking at that as a matter of urgency.

"We are in a strange position of building these extremely complex things, where we don't have a good theory of exactly how they achieve the remarkable things they are achieving," he says. "So having a better understanding of how they work will enable us to steer them in the direction we want and to ensure that they are safe.""I think a bill can be big or it could be beautiful," Musk said. "But I don't know if it could be both."

Musk, who had clashed in private with some Trump cabinet-level officials, initially pledged to cut "at least $2 trillion" from the federal government budget, before halving this target, then reducing it to $150bn.An estimated 260,000 out of the 2.3 million-strong federal civilian workforce have had their jobs cut or accepted redundancy deals as a result of Doge.

In some cases, federal judges blocked the mass firings and ordered terminated employees to be reinstated.The rapid-fire approach to cutting the federal workforce occasionally led to some workers mistakenly being let go, including staff at the US nuclear programme.

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