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231 pages, Kindle Edition
First published October 10, 2023
Giving robots rights would be a fundamental mistake. Indeed, it would be committing a moral harm. Rights overlap. One person鈥檚 right to speaking freely can, for example, interfere with another person鈥檚 right not to be discriminated against. Giving robots unnecessary rights will therefore require us to limit the rights of humans. Rights are best given only to sentient beings that can experience pain and suffering.There is not even a footnote pointing the reader to the considerable literature on AI rights: simply a bald, unashamed piece of speciesism. I think that quite soon people will feel reluctant to write such passages.
ChatGPT is built on top of a series of groundbreaking natural language systems with the family name 'GPT'. It is one of the largest neural networks ever built... GPT-1 had 117 million parameters. GPT-2 was over ten times larger, with 1.5 billion parameters. And GPT-3 was over 100 times larger again, with 175 billion parameters... GPT-4 is believed to be even larger, but OpenAI is refusing to disclose quite how much bigger it is... To give you an idea of just how much text was poured into GPT-3, the complete contents of Wikipedia made up less than 1 per cent of this input.
...many have compared the field of AI to medieval alchemy. Rather than attempting to turn base metals into gold, the ambition of artificial intelligence is to turn simple computation into intelligence.
...those of us working in the field have a responsibility to stop anthropomorphising the technologies that we build. Too often we talk about AI as if it were in fact human. We speak about a chatbot 'understanding' a sentence, a 'self-driving' car, the computer-vision algorithm 'recognising' the pedestrian, and the possibility of robot 'rights'. In reality, chatbots don't understand language. There is no self - no person, no sentient, self-aware intelligence - driving the car... Algorithms don't actually recognise objects. And robots need rights about as much as your toaster does.