Elon Musk says his AI rival is ‘unlikely to annihilate humans’

Billionaire Elon Musk said on Monday he will launch an artificial intelligence platform called TruthGPT to challenge the offerings from Microsoft and Google.

He criticised Microsoft-backed OpenAI, the firm behind chatbot sensation ChatGPT, for “training the AI to lie” and said OpenAI has now become a “closed source”, “for-profit” organisation “closely allied with Microsoft”. He also accused Larry Page, co-founder of Google, of not taking AI safety seriously.

“I’m going to start something which I call ‘TruthGPT’, or a maximum truth-seeking AI that tries to understand the nature of the universe,” Musk said in an interview with Fox News Channel’s Tucker Carlson aired on Monday.

He said TruthGPT “might be the best path to safety” that would be “unlikely to annihilate humans”.

“It’s simply starting late. But I will try to create a third option,” Musk said.

Musk, OpenAI, Microsoft and Page did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Musk has been poaching AI researchers from Google to launch a start-up to rival OpenAI, people familiar with the matter said.

Musk last month registered a firm named X.AI, incorporated in Nevada, according to a state filing. The firm listed Musk as the sole director and Jared Birchall, the MD of Musk’s family office, as company secretary.

The move came even after Musk and a group of artificial intelligence experts and industry executives called for a six-month pause in developing systems more powerful than OpenAI’s newly launched GPT-4, citing potential risks to society.

‘Civilisational destruction’

Musk also reiterated his warnings about AI during the interview with Carlson. “AI is more dangerous than, say, mismanaged aircraft design or production maintenance or bad car production” according to the excerpts. “It has the potential of civilisational destruction.”

He said, for example, that a superintelligent AI can write incredibly well and potentially manipulate public opinions.

He tweeted over the weekend that he had met with former US President Barack Obama when he was president and told him that Washington needed to “encourage AI regulation”.

Read: Google ‘racing’ to build new AI tools for Search

Musk co-founded OpenAI in 2015, but he stepped down from the company’s board in 2018. In 2019, he tweeted that he left OpenAI because he had to focus on Tesla and SpaceX.

He also tweeted at that time that other reasons for his departure from OpenAI were that “Tesla was competing for some of the same people as OpenAI and I didn’t agree with some of what OpenAI team wanted to do”.

Read: AWS steps up AI rivalry with Google, Microsoft

In January, Microsoft announced a further multi-billion dollar investment in OpenAI, intensifying competition with rival Google and fuelling the race to attract AI funding in Silicon Valley.  — Hyunjoo Jin and Sheila Dang with Krystal Hu and Anna Tong, (c) 2023 Reuters

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Source: techcentral.co.za