Yann LeCun, a prominent figure in AI, believes that AI will enhance human intelligence and won't dominate as it will serve humanity. He emphasizes good engineering and market forces ensuring AI's reliability and safety. Discussions highlight the shift towards AI adapting to labor needs, aiming to empower regular workers. The rise of AI is expected to create a 'feeling economy' valuing people skills over STEM in tech roles, leading to increased productivity and efficiency without replacing most jobs. LeCun also dismisses concerns about AI being used for creating weapons, comparing it to a search engine's limitations.
Yann LeCun says AI can't help make chemical or biological weapons any more than a search engine can https://t.co/05pwGX1fxj
AI will not replace most people. It’ll just make people more efficient— coders, business analysts, etc. will just have better tools available to use, and society’s productivity will increase. https://t.co/d4RJ4TPR9t
Great to see discussion moving from how labor should adjust to AI to how AI should adjust to labor. Nice piece by @davidautor on using AI to rebuild the middle class, by giving it specific direction to augment capabilities of regular workers https://t.co/zBHzWYrUoN.
The proliferation of AI will herald a new "feeling economy," where people skills are more valuable than STEM skills in tech positions. Read more below. https://t.co/TWOIDKIw92 #STEM | #AI | #Economy
🤖👷♂️ Beyond disruption: AI, expertise, and the future of middle-class workers "Viewing tech progress mainly as job automation that replaces humans is misguided and ahistorical." https://t.co/gM5m7yK0jN https://t.co/XZtqgGIw5C
Yann LeCun says AI will amplify the intelligence of humanity as a whole: "They're not going to take over the world because they'll be working for us. We'll be setting goals for them." https://t.co/0qyjvPP4iw
Yann LeCun says good engineering and market forces are making AI reliable and safe https://t.co/mrDn8bNiBd