AI Scared People in the 1960s Too

preview_player
Показать описание
With fears of mass unemployment and even societal destruction, we’re currently in an AI panic. But scientists and popular culture have been discussing the impact and risks of artificial intelligence for decades. Back in 1964, Fortune’s Gilbert Burck spoke with prominent computer scientists to get their predictions on what AI would be capable of in the years to come. So we took a look back at that 60-year-old article to see what they got right and wrong.

Subscribe to Fortune -

Fortune Magazine is a global leader in business journalism with 55 million monthly page views and a readership of nearly 32 million, with major franchises including the Fortune 500 and the Fortune 100 Best Companies to Work For. The new Fortune video channel dives into personal stories from business owners and entrepreneurs becoming successful in business and sharing their tips to help you reach your goals.

Рекомендации по теме
Комментарии
Автор

What's with people just using earpods when recording audio? Do they not realize those have ALWAYS been awful?

DeviantDork
Автор

My AI Bachelor's Thesis in 1975 at MIT was "Planning and Movement in the World of the Spy" 😊

donelson
Автор

The 60s one is not AI it's computing. You don't understand things and we can't hear you anyways. Did no one listen to this after editing?

DeviantDork
Автор

Fortune Mag, you Fail: Audio is job #☝— Audio is MORE than ½ a video — Producer should have redone all the narration 🎙

CoxShow
Автор

Write crushing compression used on the narrator's audio.

skevosmavros
Автор

Adobe has AI tools that can help the narration audio.

ezmoney
Автор

Well spoken, informative, thanks Alex 👍

rashaunx
Автор

Hence, what was true then is still true now, namely, AI in the short term is overhyped and in the long term, it is under-hyped

moderncontemplative