Close Menu
Technology Mag

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    I Sampled All the Best Mushroom Gummies—Here’s What I Found

    June 6, 2025

    The Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses are on sale for their best price to date

    June 6, 2025

    Google Gemini can now handle scheduled tasks like an assistant

    June 6, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Subscribe
    Technology Mag
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
    • Home
    • News
    • Business
    • Games
    • Gear
    • Reviews
    • Science
    • Security
    • Trending
    • Press Release
    Technology Mag
    Home » Google DeepMind’s CEO Thinks AI Will Make Humans Less Selfish
    Business

    Google DeepMind’s CEO Thinks AI Will Make Humans Less Selfish

    News RoomBy News RoomJune 4, 20253 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Email

    If you reach a point where progress has outstripped the ability to make the systems safe, would you take a pause?

    I don’t think today’s systems are posing any sort of existential risk, so it’s still theoretical. The geopolitical questions could actually end up being trickier. But given enough time and enough care and thoughtfulness, and using the scientific method …

    If the time frame is as tight as you say, we don’t have much time for care and thoughtfulness.

    We don’t have much time. We’re increasingly putting resources into security and things like cyber and also research into, you know, controllability and understanding these systems, sometimes called mechanistic interpretability. And then at the same time, we need to also have societal debates about institutional building. How do we want governance to work? How are we going to get international agreement, at least on some basic principles around how these systems are used and deployed and also built?

    How much do you think AI is going to change or eliminate people’s jobs?

    What generally tends to happen is new jobs are created that utilize new tools or technologies and are actually better. We’ll see if it’s different this time, but for the next few years, we’ll have these incredible tools that supercharge our productivity and actually almost make us a little bit superhuman.

    If AGI can do everything humans can do, then it would seem that it could do the new jobs too.

    There’s a lot of things that we won’t want to do with a machine. A doctor could be helped by an AI tool, or you could even have an AI kind of doctor. But you wouldn’t want a robot nurse—there’s something about the human empathy aspect of that care that’s particularly humanistic.

    Tell me what you envision when you look at our future in 20 years and, according to your prediction, AGI is everywhere?

    If everything goes well, then we should be in an era of radical abundance, a kind of golden era. AGI can solve what I call root-node problems in the world—curing terrible diseases, much healthier and longer lifespans, finding new energy sources. If that all happens, then it should be an era of maximum human flourishing, where we travel to the stars and colonize the galaxy. I think that will begin to happen in 2030.

    I’m skeptical. We have unbelievable abundance in the Western world, but we don’t distribute it fairly. As for solving big problems, we don’t need answers so much as resolve. We don’t need an AGI to tell us how to fix climate change—we know how. But we don’t do it.

    I agree with that. We’ve been, as a species, a society, not good at collaborating. Our natural habitats are being destroyed, and it’s partly because it would require people to make sacrifices, and people don’t want to. But this radical abundance of AI will make things feel like a non-zero-sum game—

    AGI would change human behavior?

    Yeah. Let me give you a very simple example. Water access is going to be a huge issue, but we have a solution—desalination. It costs a lot of energy, but if there was renewable, free, clean energy [because AI came up with it] from fusion, then suddenly you solve the water access problem. Suddenly it’s not a zero-sum game anymore.

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Email
    Previous ArticleLooking for the Best Smart Scale? Step On Up
    Next Article You’re Not Ready

    Related Posts

    Elon Musk’s Feud With President Trump Wipes $152 Billion Off Tesla’s Market Cap

    June 6, 2025

    Palantir Is Going on Defense

    June 6, 2025

    At Bitcoin 2025, Crypto Purists and the MAGA Faithful Collide

    June 5, 2025

    Trumpworld Is Fighting Over ‘Official’ Crypto Wallet

    June 5, 2025

    Perplexity’s CEO Sees AI Agents as the Next Web Battleground

    June 5, 2025

    Facing a Changing Industry, AI Activists Rethink Their Strategy

    June 5, 2025
    Our Picks

    The Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses are on sale for their best price to date

    June 6, 2025

    Google Gemini can now handle scheduled tasks like an assistant

    June 6, 2025

    Elon Musk’s Feud With President Trump Wipes $152 Billion Off Tesla’s Market Cap

    June 6, 2025

    iFixit says the Switch 2 is even harder to repair than the original

    June 6, 2025
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo
    Don't Miss
    News

    Here are the biggest Nintendo Switch 2 launch games you can buy

    By News RoomJune 6, 2025

    The Nintendo Switch 2 launched on June 5th, and with it, so did a bunch…

    Apple could show off revamped Phone, Safari, and Camera apps next week

    June 6, 2025

    8BitDo’s controllers will work with the Switch 2 after a firmware update

    June 6, 2025

    Apple’s WWDC 2025: How to Watch and What to Expect

    June 6, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of use
    • Advertise
    • Contact
    © 2025 Technology Mag. All Rights Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.