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The program itself is called GPT-3 and it’s the work of San Francisco-based AI lab OpenAI, an outfit that was founded with the ambitious (some say delusional) goal of steering the development of artificial general intelligence or AGI: computer programs that possess all the depth, variety, and flexibility of the human mind. So far, so simple.
PG: I think that the one that comes to mind first is a wonderful picture of women in Kenya who are growing corn. Right at the end of that period, I also was teaching. And second, I was exhausted from having continued to do consulting and teaching at the same time. I started a second career without even having planned to.
For example, a teacher can say they are teaching fourth-grade math or a developer can specify the code language they prefer when asking for suggestions. Should we develop nonhuman minds that might eventually outnumber, outsmart, obsolete and replace us? Should we automate away all the jobs, including the fulfilling ones?
I think my favorite example of that is a women's group from the highlands of Bolivia who wrote to us maybe seven or eight years ago. They were a group of illiterate women who dictated their requests to a priest in the village, who then hand wrote the request.
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