Toggle light / dark theme

Get the latest international news and world events from around the world.

Log in for authorized contributors

Stanford Economist: The AI Risk Almost Nobody Is Talking About | Erik Brynjolfsson

Stanford economist Erik Brynjolfsson explains why the greatest danger of artificial intelligence may not be mass unemployment itself, but the concentration of wealth, power, and decision-making in the hands of a small group of companies or individuals.

In this conversation, he discusses the “Turing Trap,” the disappearance and creation of jobs, universal basic income, the future of economic growth, and why businesses should use AI to amplify human abilities rather than simply replace workers. He also explains why AI could become more transformative than the Industrial Revolution, why its impact is still largely invisible in productivity statistics, and which human skills may become increasingly valuable.

00:00 – Introduction.
01:05 – Why companies focus on eliminating jobs.
03:41 – The Turing Trap.
06:51 – Which tasks and jobs should AI replace?
08:35 – Millions of jobs will disappear.
09:25 – Why stopping technological change will fail.
10:48 – Entrepreneurship, security and the jobs of the future.
12:41 – AI, universal basic income and concentrated power.
15:29 – Why AI should complement humans.
17:41 – An economy that no longer needs human consumers.
20:05 – Is the younger generation doomed?
22:38 – How AI could help less-experienced workers.
25:10 – The most valuable human skill in the AI era.
27:24 – Access to AI and the falling price of intelligence.
32:31 – Is the AI investment boom a bubble?
33:44 – Bigger than the Industrial Revolution.
34:36 – Why AI is not yet visible in productivity statistics.
39:29 – Could AI produce explosive economic growth?
41:51 – How Erik Brynjolfsson uses AI in his own work.
45:34 – Will AI replace economists and scientists?
49:53 – Is AI destroying the traditional learning process?
54:46 – Shared prosperity or unprecedented inequality?
56:27 – Could AI replace the free market?

Don’t forget to subscribe to our channel and turn on notifications so you won’t miss any of our future episodes ► / @thisistheworldofficial.

Michal Wyrebkowski (host) on LinkedIn: / michal-wyrebkowski.
This is The World: https://www.thisisworld.org/
This is The World on Instagram: / thisistheworld_podcast.

Boston Dynamics’ AI-powered humanoid robot is learning to work in a factory

For decades, engineers have been trying to create robots that look and act human. Now, rapid advances in artificial intelligence are taking humanoids from the lab to the factory floor. As fears grow that AI will displace workers, a global race is underway to develop human-like robots able to do human jobs. Competitors include Tesla, startups backed by Amazon and Nvidia, and state-supported Chinese companies. Boston Dynamics is a frontrunner. The Massachusetts company, valued at more than a billion dollars, is hard at work on a humanoid it calls Atlas. South Korean carmaker Hyundai holds an 90% stake in the robot maker. As we first told you in January, we were invited to see the first real-world test of Atlas at Hyundai’s new factory near Savannah, Georgia. There, we got a glimpse of a humanoid future that’s coming faster than you might think.

Hyundai’s sprawling auto plant is about as cutting-edge as it gets. More than 1,000 robots work alongside almost 1,500 humans, hoisting, stamping and welding in robotic unison. This may look like the factory of the future, but we found the future of the future in the parts warehouse, tucked away in the back corner, getting ready for work.

Meet Atlas: A 5’9, 200 pound, AI-powered humanoid created by Boston Dynamics. The rise of the robots is science fiction no more.

Dell CEO Michael Dell makes one of largest public university donations in US history, ‘gifts’ $750 million to the University of …

Dell CEO Michael Dell has donated $750 million to the University of Texas at Austin, marking one of the largest donations ever made to a public university in the United States. The gift will help fund a new healthcare and research campus, including what the university describes as the country’s first artificial intelligence-native hospital.

The Future of Neuroscience Is Growing and Reviving Human Brains

Further Reading.
Thumbnail image credit: Not alive, but not dead… FEATURED SCIENCE ARTICLE.
Brain background: Nexorg.
Brain organoid images: Elke Gabriel.

Not alive, but not dead: disembodied human brains used for drug testing.
https://www.science.org/content/artic
Restoration of brain circulation and cellular functions hours.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30996

Vascularizing organoids-on-chip for perfused and personalized models.
https://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/artic

Startup Testing Drugs on Freshly Extracted Human Brains That Are Kept On Life Support.
https://futurism.com/health-medicine/.

Cerebral organoids transplantation repairs infarcted cortex and restores impaired function after stroke https://www.nature.com/articles/s4153

World First: Patient Receives High-Risk Therapy to Make Cells Young Again

An eagerly awaited and controversial clinical trial to ‘wind back the clock’ on aging cells in the eye and restore them to a more youthful state has officially begun.

This week, the United States biotechnology company Life Biosciences, Inc. announced that it had dosed its first patient with an experimental therapy designed to reverse age-related vision loss.

The ambitious idea is to turn back aging by activating three genes in retinal ganglion cells, which connect the brain to the eyes.

/* */