‘Society cannot function if no one is accountable for AI’ — Jaron Lanier, the godfather of virtual reality, discusses how far our empathy should extend to AI in episode two of new podcast, The Ten Reckonings

Whether we like it or not, we can’t ignore AI. What started as a fun, gimmicky chatbot on our desktops, albeit one that could talk a bit like a human, is already taking jobs, accessing medical records, and reshaping workplaces. We are rapidly approaching the point where the practical realities of building and governing advanced AI systems must be confronted.

As the recent furor over indecent Grok-generated images on X, and the use of Meta AI smart glasses to record women without their permission for social media clicks has shown, the guardrails meant to help society cope with the deluge of AI devices and new technologies seem seriously lacking.

Even before the latest controversies around AI-generated images, one of the biggest shocks to me was the way some AI companies decided it was perfectly acceptable to train their models on copyrighted material from authors and artists without permission – and the fact that, despite a few lingering lawsuits, they appear to have faced few consequences so far.

Zero accountability

Society cannot function if no one is accountable for AI

Technologist Jaron Lanier

All of this makes me wonder whether we’re really ready for a world in which AI runs everything with zero accountability. Two people who have been grappling with similar questions are technologist Jaron Lanier and Dr Ben Goertzel, CEO of SingularityNET and founder of the ASI Alliance, in the next upcoming episode of The Ten Reckonings podcast.

“Society cannot function if no one is accountable for AI”, says Lanier, who is often described as the ‘godfather of virtual reality’.

This new episode forms part of a series where these issues are explored in depth. According to Goertzel, “The ASI Alliance’s purpose is not to present a unified position, but to create space for the world’s leading thinkers to openly debate and, in doing so, help society reckon with the profound choices ahead.”

Lanier discusses the idea of AI sentience and its implications. He argues: “I don’t care how autonomous your AI is – some human has to be responsible for what it does, or we cannot have a functioning society. All of human society, human experience, and law is based on people being real. If you assign this responsibility to technology, you undo civilization. That is immoral – you absolutely can’t do it.”

Shaping the future

I agree with him. While accelerating toward more autonomous, decentralized AGI could ultimately prove safer and more beneficial than today’s fragmented landscape of proprietary systems with weak guardrails, Lanier’s point about human accountability is exactly right. Right now, AI companies seem to be operating on the assumption that it’s better to beg forgiveness later than ask for permission now, and that approach cannot continue.

And while there appears to be little hope of meaningful AI regulation coming from the US at the moment, the rest of the world may be prepared to step in. The UK regulator Ofcom is launching an investigation into X over Grok, and Indonesia and Malaysia have banned Grok altogether.

At this point we all know that AI is going to shape our future, but the question of responsibility still lingers. Governments are going to have to be willing to step up because if they hesitate then the current lack of accountability edges us into even more dangerous territory. Whether that’s through images, or medical advice, or the protection of our rights. Progress without accountability isn’t innovation, it’s recklessness.

Follow TechRadar on Google News and add us as a preferred source to get our expert news, reviews, and opinion in your feeds. Make sure to click the Follow button!

And of course you can also follow TechRadar on TikTok for news, reviews, unboxings in video form, and get regular updates from us on WhatsApp too.

Read more @ TechRadar

Latest posts

YouTube Music rolls out split-view Now Playing redesign on Android, iOS

The split-view Now Playing redesign that YouTube Music has been working on since last year is now widely rolling out.  Read more @ 9to5google

Godzilla goes to New York in ‘Minus Zero’ teaser trailer

Japanese entertainment company Toho has released a teaser video for Godzilla Minus Zero, the upcoming sequel to the award-winning film Godzilla Minus One. The...

The FCC just saved Netgear from its router ban for no obvious reason

The United States' foreign router ban didn't make a whole lot of sense, and today may not change that. The FCC has just granted...

Microsoft’s finally giving up on its massive Surface Hub touchscreen displays

Microsoft is reportedly ending production of its Surface Hub 3 collaborative office display and canceling plans for a Surface Hub 4, according to Windows...

Godzilla Minus Zero stomps through New York in first teaser trailer

*insert Godzilla screeching sound* Here's the very first look at the next big kaiju feature. Godzilla Minus Zero will continue the story of 2023's...

NAACP sues xAI over data center pollution

The NAACP is suing xAI and a subsidiary called MZX Tech for allegedly operating unpermitted methane gas turbines to power its Colossus 2 data...

Google’s new Windows app is yet another way to access Gemini

Google has introduced a new app for Windows desktops and, unsurprisingly, it puts AI front at center. If you aren't a big fan of...

FCC just handed Netgear a de facto router monopoly in the US

The Federal Communications Commission has announced that Netgear has been given conditional approval that effectively exempts it from a previous ban on foreign-made networking...

Sony is nerfing its Bravia TVs’ program guide

Sony is removing some features from its TV guide and program guide displays for channels received by an over the air TV antenna on...

Roborock Saros 20 is one of the best robot vacuums, refined

Following last year’s choice between two priorities, Roborock’s new Saros 20 settles on enhanced navigation as a focus of what has become one of...