AI Needs You: How We Can Change AI's Future and Save Our Own

AI Needs You: How We Can Change AI's Future and Save Our Own

  • Downloads:3302
  • Type:Epub+TxT+PDF+Mobi
  • Create Date:2024-03-16 05:22:02
  • Update Date:2025-09-07
  • Status:finish
  • Author:Verity Harding
  • ISBN:0691244871
  • Environment:PC/Android/iPhone/iPad/Kindle

Summary

A humanist manifesto for the age of AI

Artificial intelligence may be the most transformative technology of our time。 As AI’s power grows, so does the need to figure out what—and who—this technology is really for。 AI Needs You argues that it is critical for society to take the lead in answering this urgent question and ensuring that AI fulfills its promise。

Verity Harding draws inspiring lessons from the histories of three twentieth-century tech revolutions—the space race, in vitro fertilization, and the internet—to empower each of us to join the conversation about AI and its possible futures。 Sharing her perspective as a leading insider in technology and politics, she rejects the dominant narrative, which often likens AI’s advent to that of the atomic bomb。 History points the way to an achievable future in which democratically determined values guide AI to be peaceful in its intent; to embrace limitations; to serve purpose, not profit; and to be firmly rooted in societal trust。

AI Needs You gives us hope that we, the people, can imbue AI with a deep intentionality that reflects our best values, ideals, and interests, and that serves the public good。 AI will permeate our lives in unforeseeable ways, but it is clear that the shape of AI’s future—and of our own—cannot be left only to those building it。 It is up to us to guide this technology away from our worst fears and toward a future that we can trust and believe in。

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Reviews

Claire

While offering some interesting insights into AI development and legislation, the focus on other technological advancements was excessive。

Beth

This book read like a college thesis about the history of ethical decisions, and politics in the United States, and I found that it had little connection to the title。

Jason Furman

There are lots and lots of opinions on policy towards and governance of AI。 A lot of those opinions are based on recycling the same sets of arguments or facts。 Some of those opinions are that others should not have opinions on these matters。 Now enter Verity Harding, who has worked in government, industry, and at universities, with a book that is truly additive by bringing new ideas and insights to bear into what is already starting to feel like an old debate。 It is also a really fun and stimula There are lots and lots of opinions on policy towards and governance of AI。 A lot of those opinions are based on recycling the same sets of arguments or facts。 Some of those opinions are that others should not have opinions on these matters。 Now enter Verity Harding, who has worked in government, industry, and at universities, with a book that is truly additive by bringing new ideas and insights to bear into what is already starting to feel like an old debate。 It is also a really fun and stimulating read。The bulk of Harding’s book is a history of the governance, mostly by government, of three postwar technologies: space exploration, IVF and human embryonic research, and the internet。 Each of these are interesting in their own right, filled with lively characters, big stakes, and something that is much harder ex post—a sense of the many different, and worse, possibilities and paths that were not taken because of the choices that were made。What emerges is a subtle interplay of contingency, individual government actions, the importance of ethics as a North Star and motivation, diplomacy (in some cases), and also the participation, and in some cases, centrality of businesses。 The result was a treaty that space should be disarmed, a broad societal consensus in the UK on embryonic research, and the extraordinary rise of the internet as a global system that is not controlled by any one country or corporations (in part because of wise choices made in the United States)。Harding links each of these histories to their relevance but also limitations for thinking about AI。 The individual histories are bracketed by a discussion of the rise of digital platforms in the Bay Area, Harding’s thrill and disappointment with them, and then a discussion of what lessons we should take from all of it。Harding’s commitment is not to a specific policy but instead to a process that respects the importance of government but also the essential role of business, the need for ethics on the part of both players, and a passionate belief that “you” have a role to play as well。 。。。more

John Fisher

Finally, someone is thinking about AI as the latest tech revolution of many and not just a miracle or an existential threat。 The public debates about AI have been so hermetic that it is a profound relief to finally have AI put in conversation with other, similar breakthroughs and to draw lessons from the most effective government responses to them。

Tag

    artificial intelligence future ainews