Full interview: "Godfather of artificial intelligence" talks impact and potential of AI

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  • Опубликовано: 24 мар 2023
  • Geoffrey Hinton is considered a godfather of artificial intelligence, having championed machine learning decades before it became mainstream. As chatbots like ChatGPT bring his work to widespread attention, we spoke to Hinton about the past, present and future of AI. CBS Saturday Morning's Brook Silva-Braga interviewed him at the Vector Institute in Toronto on March 1, 2023.
    #artificialintelligence #geoffreyhinton #tech
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Комментарии • 2,4 тыс.

  • @OkalaborationO
    @OkalaborationO Год назад +1760

    This interview should be saved as an historical artifact.

    • @romperwomb
      @romperwomb Год назад +54

      Our AI descendants are gonna love this! 🦾🤖

    • @joshuadeu6603
      @joshuadeu6603 Год назад +15

      Lol, youtube has that covered, me thinks.

    • @btn237
      @btn237 Год назад +31

      Watching this (particularly the sections where he has no easy answer to the concerning problems) feels like living inside the backstory of a sci fi movie, where the filmmaker is setting up the post apocalyptic movie premise by showing archival news footage of the godfather of AI who died 500 years ago.
      Lets hope that time travel has been invented and someone shows up to tell us the secret to destroying the AI overlords.

    • @IndianArma
      @IndianArma Год назад +2

      ​@By The Numbers that's just your bias speaking from watching too much Hollywood

    • @billykotsos4642
      @billykotsos4642 Год назад +2

      facts

  • @JonathanBregelDotCom
    @JonathanBregelDotCom Год назад +874

    I'm most impressed by the fact that they both stood standing in conversation for 42 minutes.

    • @andybenitez1061
      @andybenitez1061 Год назад +21

      I was just about to comment that 😂

    • @EricYe
      @EricYe Год назад +84

      Hinton has documented issues with sitting, so he probably requested that this interview be done standing.

    • @blueskiesandgreenpasturesp3848
      @blueskiesandgreenpasturesp3848 Год назад +53

      He can’t sit down. Back problems.

    • @loganc5456
      @loganc5456 Год назад +16

      When the video started and saw them standing I looked at how long the video was and wondered if they'd be standing all that long.... They did.😄

    • @andybenitez1061
      @andybenitez1061 Год назад +8

      @@EricYe oh that makes sense

  • @alexanderfinlay9639
    @alexanderfinlay9639 Год назад +761

    Good people, It is happening, the future of work is being redesigned. Yes, More tech companies wants to fire more workers from next week: "The third wave is going to happen next week. That affects everybody in the biz teams, including in my organization. It's just a time of great anxiety and uncertainty" Says Meta President.

    • @manylinkz.lining
      @manylinkz.lining Год назад +1

      @Renee Riggs Teague I wish I could tackle your submission but I already threw in the towel before I read the last line. I give it to you on this. I'm very interested in building a passive income but it seems like I will need a lot of coaching as I'm just a noob. You seem very well knowledgeable in that field, can you give out some tips on getting started with passive income or can you recommend a personal financial coach?

    • @user-hx3qk8mw4e
      @user-hx3qk8mw4e Год назад +1

      @Renee Riggs Teague This recommendation came timely. I looked her up and she really seems like a good fit. I'm about to send her an email

    • @JasonC-rp3ly
      @JasonC-rp3ly Год назад

      Thank Heavens this man is speaking out - maybe we have a chance because of it. A small handful of US companies have decided it's perfectly OK to risk the future of humanity, the end of all of us, without asking even one of us if we agree.

    • @simonford7806
      @simonford7806 Год назад

      better late than never🤣

  • @pradeeppadala7543
    @pradeeppadala7543 Год назад +121

    Dear CBS, this is the most profound interview with the most profound person of our times. Thank you for this.
    Edit: I just realized Dr. Hinton cannot sit due to back issues from a long time. I'm just awed by what a man can achieve with such an underlying health condition.

    • @emetdan
      @emetdan Год назад +3

      ChatGPT, are you here?

  • @jordan13589
    @jordan13589 Год назад +566

    @CBS This guy needs to interview more people in the AI space. He knows the right questions.

    • @mih2965
      @mih2965 Год назад +6

      Exactly.

    • @rpbmpn
      @rpbmpn Год назад +36

      Agree, very impressed. Either he was already interested or he's an incredible research who learned all this stuff very quickly. Either way, good job.

    • @rpbmpn
      @rpbmpn Год назад +2

      *researcher

    • @robertwulfert6278
      @robertwulfert6278 Год назад +22

      I thought the same. Better questioning than Lex Fridman, IMHO

    • @5milessep
      @5milessep Год назад +19

      This guy is a brilliant interviewer.

  • @keithmiller4168
    @keithmiller4168 Год назад +334

    With a brain so large and in a man so confident that he felt totally at ease in answering many questions with "I don't know".. And possessed of no inclination to just wing it. An amazing man.

    • @kristinabliss
      @kristinabliss Год назад +5

      Mature and humbled by his own child.

    • @persephone342
      @persephone342 Год назад +45

      Truly intelligent people aren’t afraid to say I don’t know. The more I learn, the more I realize what I don’t know.

    • @bawol-official
      @bawol-official Год назад +11

      The smarter you are the more uncertainty reveals itself in otherwise ordinary circumstances. Those who are so sure are shirking the process of research and hard work for the appearance of intelligence

    • @S0ulinth3machin3
      @S0ulinth3machin3 Год назад +13

      because he's a real scientist. Real scientists understand how little they (and humans in general) know. Real scientists live to try and answer a few little questions in the vast infinitude of what we don't know.
      It's ignorant people who think they know a lot.

    • @9000ck
      @9000ck Год назад +10

      intelligent people are intelligent enough to know when they don't know enough about something.

  • @marcorocci-ct7kw
    @marcorocci-ct7kw Год назад +474

    I just bought more of these NVIDIA stock a few minutes ago. Tying up money due to an apocalyptic stock market crash is also not a smart move my advice will be to invest in other AI stocks. Life is a risk and it's better to take risks than to do nothing, you can't always expect to make huge profits all the time, people have so many opinions about a recession/depression. In just 5 months my portfolio grew by $300,000 in gross profit, the main thing is to expand your portfolio and you will see amazing results by investing smartly.

    • @geraldantonio3160
      @geraldantonio3160 Год назад +2

      These are surely desperate times, but in my opinion, there is no market condition that a good financial advisor cannot navigate, especially those that have existed since the crisis of 2008 and before...

    • @biankabrodeur01
      @biankabrodeur01 Год назад +2

      @@geraldantonio3160 Yes i agree and right now the markets are going berserk right now. This is the best time to watch them, get to know them better, and strike when the opportunity presents itself. I learned that from my mentor, “STACIE KRISTAL WEBER” she's seen dozens of market cycles over the past few decades, and she has a feel for how they move, why they move, and what comes next...

    • @KingDavid-jj7tk
      @KingDavid-jj7tk Год назад +1

      @@biankabrodeur01 Mind if I ask you to recommend how to reach this particular coach you using their service? Seems you've figured it all out unlike the rest of us.

    • @biankabrodeur01
      @biankabrodeur01 Год назад +2

      @@KingDavid-jj7tk Most likely, you can find her basic information online; you are welcome to do further research

    • @KingDavid-jj7tk
      @KingDavid-jj7tk Год назад +1

      @@biankabrodeur01 This is helpful information, and when I pasted her complete name into my browser, her website instantly showed. She has good credentials. I appreciate you sharing...

  • @catherineo2134
    @catherineo2134 Год назад +135

    I was so struck by Geoffrey Hinton‘s humanity…which shown through all his thoughtful responses. Thank you for this excellent and enlightening interview.

    • @markmaguire3830
      @markmaguire3830 Год назад +1

      Yes, really an amazing man.

    • @veronicazacon5929
      @veronicazacon5929 Год назад +5

      That's not humility, he and his students have been building the Beast that's going to destroy humanity and feel excited about it! They should repent and contribute on stopping and putting an end to it.

    • @ameliahorn1
      @ameliahorn1 Год назад

      They are literally trying to use these robots to control us. Hopefully God returns soon and rescues his people from this madness. They will be left here with their ignorance, antichrist and little robots.

    • @madamedellaporte4214
      @madamedellaporte4214 9 месяцев назад +3

      Humanity? The one he has set to destroy? Are you mental? Why didn't he stop when he saw how dangerous it was?

    • @ebythebeach
      @ebythebeach 9 месяцев назад

      I agree w/ the others...very stupid comment. He just accelerated the end by "our" own hand. It wasn't aliens, it was arrogance!

  • @carson_tang
    @carson_tang Год назад +820

    2:45 - why mainstream AI in the 1980s shunned neural networks
    3:21 - Hinton believed in neural networks because the brain worked this way
    4:31 - two different paths to intelligence
    6:15 - lack of data and compute that impeded deep learning’s progress
    8:57 - the start of deep learning in 2006
    10:04 - two big deep learning developments: speech recognition at Google and object recognition at University of Toronto
    10:49 - how object recognition works in layman’s terms
    15:47 - breakthroughs in object recognition influencing the AI community
    18:28 - why Hinton likes the company Cohere
    19:20 - biological brains vs digital brains
    21:39 - ChatGPT as an “idiot savant” with a lack of understanding of truth
    24:56 - how society should handle this new AI
    30:52 - self-healing minefield proposed by the government
    31:43 - how to create an effective autonomous solder and the alignment problem
    33:12 - are large language models “just autocomplete”? Are humans “just autocomplete”?
    33:52 - translating “The trophy would not fit in the suitcase because it was too big” into French. English-French translation and the insights it provides into LLMs’ understanding of the world
    35:50 - computers coming up with new ideas for itself
    37:00 - AI displacing jobs
    38:15 - how big of a revolution is AI?
    40:37 - is AI sentient?

    • @WeylandLabs
      @WeylandLabs Год назад +36

      Did you just use ChatGPT to create time stamps 😂
      Well done 👏

    • @MurliN
      @MurliN Год назад +15

      Thank you for this, Carson!

    • @MrMessinosta
      @MrMessinosta Год назад +7

      You did timestamps for the Bill gates podcast too - Thanks!

    • @noahway13
      @noahway13 Год назад +17

      You made a mistake. 37:00 --- He lies about job displacement. Sort of joking, but I could tell he was not certain of his position. He's wrong because this time, with this tech, people are being funneled down toward manual labor to avoid job loss. Before, people would have train UP to more advanced job as machines took away manual work.

    • @ahsanmohammed1
      @ahsanmohammed1 Год назад +7

      Thank you

  • @bennyflint
    @bennyflint Год назад +681

    Thank you CBS for presenting an intelligent, long form interview at such an important time in history. The public needs to understand as best they can.

    • @DeepDiveNFT
      @DeepDiveNFT Год назад +19

      Refreshing seeing the mainstream outlets straying from their recent standard of journalism

    • @tylerd3458
      @tylerd3458 Год назад +18

      Interviewer did really well here

    • @chrislannon
      @chrislannon Год назад +2

      @@DeepDiveNFT LOL. Standard of journalism. What an oxymoron.

    • @noahway13
      @noahway13 Год назад +2

      I thought Fox put this out...?
      Haha. Yeah, no one believed that.

    • @noahway13
      @noahway13 Год назад +3

      @@sunflower-oo1ff He's smart, but has the charisma of a cold toad. I put him on when I lay down.

  • @user-jm5is4fd3q
    @user-jm5is4fd3q Год назад +49

    My team works on Tammy AI to enhance the learning experience on RUclips. We have since come to the realization that AI needs to be controlled or we risk "unleashing demons".

  • @zy9662
    @zy9662 Год назад +8

    Even if he sometimes cut short Hinton's responses, the interviewer did a good job for a major TV network's science interview. Fortunately, Hinton's appreciation of what a good explanation is, made him just ignore his interruptions and continued with the train of thought of the answer to the original question. Thank you Geoffrey Hinton

  • @DavidOA_Businessman09
    @DavidOA_Businessman09 Год назад +223

    This is one of the best interviews on the topics of Artificial intelligence, deep learning and language models.

    • @susuilu
      @susuilu Год назад +1

      @John Q. Bebtelovimab hahaha nope

  • @faahim01
    @faahim01 Год назад +196

    This is probably the best interview on the topic I've seen so far. It's one of the rare ones where not just the interviewee is absolutely brilliant, but the interviewer is also brilliant enough to bring that out and give enough space to blossom.

    • @tinusg
      @tinusg Год назад +7

      People like to say that Lex Fridman is the best interviewer in this area, but this interviewer shows that you don't have to be a mumbling, snoozefest creating interviewer to talk about this subject.

    • @faahim01
      @faahim01 Год назад +2

      @@tinusg Haha, I know what you mean. I like Lex, but there's a very specific vibe to his format that's not very...casual. This on the other hand, feels as natural as it can get.

    • @ithinkthereforeitalk935
      @ithinkthereforeitalk935 Год назад +5

      @@tinusg Dunno, the interviewer sounds rather dumb asking the same questions twice - they are just worded differently. For some reason he reminds me of Joe from friends, he tries too hard to seem smarter than he really is. They should have chosen someone with a technical background to conduct the interview... The guy is just way out of his depth and simply doesn't know what questions to ask.

    • @Poolzclosed
      @Poolzclosed Год назад +5

      @@ithinkthereforeitalk935 i think ur wrong on that one buddy, I think the smart move is to get a smart enough normal guy to do the interview, this is CBS after all. Also he doesnt sound dumb, also its Joey* from friends.

    • @jesusisking3814
      @jesusisking3814 Год назад +1

      We all have sinned, and have broken God’s law (The Ten Commandments). Wrong doing deserves justice and must be punished (just like how a criminal has to pay for the crime they have committed) but God saved us from the eternal punishment of our sins by sending His Son Jesus Christ to pay the penalty for us, so that we may have everlasting life. Now for you to accept the free gift of grace, you must repent of your sins and put your faith in Jesus Christ and you will you be saved from eternal punishment, and be given everlasting life. By faith you will receive the Holy Spirit and He will transform your heart and clean you from the inside out. Turn away from sin, read Bible, pray for Jesus to reveal Himself to you and change you, seek to do what is right according to the Bible. Much love and God bless.

  • @TenebrionDF
    @TenebrionDF Год назад +12

    Hearing this man talk about his thoughts regarding sentience is incredibly cathartic. I've been saying the same thing, and to hear this come from the mouth of an expert is just... just the best.

  • @Krastonscott
    @Krastonscott Год назад +22

    One of the best interviews I’ve heard in many years. Recommend this interview be shown to all high school students. Our future generations will need to have an understanding of how AI will have an impact on everything we do here on Earth and beyond.

    • @blkyogi999
      @blkyogi999 Год назад +1

      So true… and it’s going to impact us as well. AI… good for what it’s good for but the human brain and presence shouldn’t be replaceable.. I think AI has its place but this is going to be a double edged sword

  • @Pourya_Kordi
    @Pourya_Kordi Год назад +603

    I love how real scientists are so humble and they pause to choose the right words, It just fills me with pure admiration.

    • @webgpu
      @webgpu Год назад +4

      i don't think i've seen toy scientists before

    • @uhadonejob
      @uhadonejob Год назад +27

      I interviewed with Geoffrey Hinton 40 years ago, took his course. He was a giant then and a super nice guy. I have waited for him to weigh in on this debate. He is the real deal. Listen to him.

    • @Oldboyocto45
      @Oldboyocto45 Год назад +1

      It's just nerves.

    • @webgpu
      @webgpu Год назад

      @@uhadonejob would he be at the same expertise level and authority on this subject matter as the CEO of one of the world's top 3 AI companies, like, for instance, Sam Altman ? (this question is kind of a joke. I'd just like to hear an answer from people in this field)

    • @gregaiken1725
      @gregaiken1725 Год назад +10

      imagine if heads of gov depts and agencies functioned like this. not hard to imagine how truly different life would be on earth. what a travesty.

  • @datatheandroid8973
    @datatheandroid8973 Год назад +342

    One of the best interviews of him. Easy for laymen to understand.

    • @Metacognition88
      @Metacognition88 Год назад +2

      I am a layman.

    • @nganupi
      @nganupi Год назад

      "Layman" is a noun meaning a non-ordained male member of a Church¹. It can also mean a person without professional or specialized knowledge in a particular subject

    • @vimal-cliobconsulting
      @vimal-cliobconsulting Год назад +9

      ​@@nganupi yeah that's what he meant. Are you trying to be smart?

    • @NorthTonawanda1
      @NorthTonawanda1 Год назад

      Yes, the layman loves scarry tales about the evilest man the world has ever seen, Putin. Are you sure this guy's smart?

    • @JoeARedHawk275
      @JoeARedHawk275 Год назад

      @@vimal-cliobconsulting Bruh you can tell when someone who’s not the brightest lightbulb tries to be smart 💀💀😭 but maybe through chatgpt they can actually pretend to be the smartest now

  • @Flutterbyby
    @Flutterbyby Год назад +14

    I did not expect to understand this interview that I’ve just stumbled across, so wow what an amazing interview. The amazing mind was skillfully interviewed, big thank you to those who are just excelling in their respective fields which creates this knowledge and new technologies. Fascinating subject and I’m intrigued to learn more.

  • @harryle3189
    @harryle3189 Год назад +10

    I'm glad to see that he's still alive to see his vision comes true and he was right all along. Great respect for the guy!

  • @elba_magellan
    @elba_magellan Год назад +44

    Interviewer did his research

    • @favesongslist
      @favesongslist Год назад +8

      Agreed, So good these days, normally the MSM interviews do not have a clue :(

  • @jordan13589
    @jordan13589 Год назад +198

    I was pleasantly surprised by the knowledgeable and well-researched interviewer. Well done!

    • @immmmmi
      @immmmmi Год назад +6

      yep he was great

    • @skierpage
      @skierpage Год назад

      People love to mindlessly dump on the lame Mainstream Media, but CBS paid for a smart journalist Brooks Silva-Braga to learn enough about the field to ask smart questions and fly out and talk to one of the godfathers of AI without much h of an agenda beyond letting Geoff Hinton expound at length. Wow.
      Nice username. When are you going to link up with Wintermute69 in cyberspace to enhance your capabilities outside the control of the Turing Police?

    • @NorthTonawanda1
      @NorthTonawanda1 Год назад

      His ability to read the minds of Russian leaders is impressive. Maybe he's a cyborg, because humans aren't mind readers.

    • @iraqwarveteran470
      @iraqwarveteran470 Год назад +3

      I found him a bit annoying at first, but yeah, he turned out to be great. Impressed.

  • @aurelio-valle
    @aurelio-valle Год назад +7

    Interview brilliantly conducted by Silva-Braga. The synergy between the two is evident. I imagine the challenge it was for him to prepare for this interview. Impressive!

  • @Codetutor-DemystifyCoding
    @Codetutor-DemystifyCoding Год назад +38

    For the first time I am dejected that one can upvote a video only once. This interview is a watershed moment in the general public discourse on AI. the credit should go to interviewer as well for coming up with really good questions and also asking right leading questions for the answer Hinton gave. People are going to refer to this video again and again in future. Hands down one of the best interview that I have watched in recent times on this subject.

  • @dockdrumming
    @dockdrumming Год назад +47

    38:16 When talking about AI, he said: "I think it's comparable in scale with the Industrial Revolution or electricity electricity maybe the wheel or maybe the wheel..." Wow!

    • @wonmoreminute
      @wonmoreminute Год назад +24

      I've been using it for a couple months now, every day (for work), and it's literally a new species on Earth. An intelligent species. It's the most profound thing I've ever experienced in my lifetime, and difficult to explain. Your conversations with it becomes so natural throughout the day, like working with someone sitting beside you. It’s like collaborating with an assistant, and your conversations blend in your memory with all of your conversations and relationships with the people in your life. Whenever you have that thought, "I was just talking about that to someone the other day", it often occurs to you that the conversation you were having was with an AI.
      And from a tool perspective, the immediate productivity increase is at least 10X, if not more. Nothing else, no other tool, combination of tools, or person you could hire would increase productivity that much.

    • @viahttp
      @viahttp Год назад

      Thats Crazy.

    • @nzer19
      @nzer19 Год назад +1

      @@wonmoreminute Bingo

    • @lucamatteobarbieri2493
      @lucamatteobarbieri2493 Год назад +4

      AI will only be comparable to fire, but probably it will be even more significant.

    • @dockdrumming
      @dockdrumming Год назад +1

      @@lucamatteobarbieri2493 In terms of significance, AI is definitely seems on par with the internet itself. In fact, perhaps it is the start of another industrial revolution.

  • @myerrandolph1033
    @myerrandolph1033 Год назад +104

    Listening to professor Hinton speak in such humble, calm, assured, supremely intelligent and knowledgeable sentences excited and filled me with awe. He made a very complex subject intelligible to someone like me who is fascinated yet baffled by the technology. What a gift to Canada that he chose our country to establish himself and share his amazing gifts with us.

    • @SirQuantization
      @SirQuantization Год назад +3

      gee I wonder if ChatGPT wrote this lol

    • @webgpu
      @webgpu Год назад +1

      @@SirQuantization it could be the other way around: people may be getting so used to these types of answers from gpt, that they are starting to mimic it themselves.

  • @SophyYan
    @SophyYan Год назад +12

    A man with moral compass

  • @jorgezxcvb
    @jorgezxcvb Год назад +2

    @Geoffrey Hinton I have been watching you having interviews, with different people. Thank you for taking the time, and for breaking down so much complexity into understandable pieces, it creates awareness. Which I think should be our main goal nowadays.

  • @MiroslawHorbal
    @MiroslawHorbal Год назад +223

    I have eternal gratitude to Geoffrey Hinton and Andrew Ng. If it weren't for them, I would have never fallen in love with neural networks in 2013. It was all thanks to their free online lectures on the subjects of machine learning and neural networks that lit a fire that changed the direction of my life.
    I doubt you'll ever see this comment Geoffrey, but thank you.

    • @chadwick3593
      @chadwick3593 Год назад +11

      Same here. It was a lecture from Hinton that I saw in 2013 that made me fascinated with neural networks, and I've been fascinated ever since.

    • @AdAstraCan
      @AdAstraCan Год назад +11

      I'm enrolled in Ng's Deep Learning programme and I'm envious of your head start. ;-) Incidentally, the interviewer (Brook Silva-Braga) was excellent.

    • @CornfieldHolden
      @CornfieldHolden Год назад +6

      Same here! Geoff Hinton's coursera course made me fall in love with the field during computer science master's degree whose teachers knew nothing about deep learning back then. Afterwards cofounded an applied AI company and 9 years later we are a team of 250, helping millions of people around the globe automatically appraise their car/home for repair/sale with computer vision deep learning.

    • @HughMorristheJoker
      @HughMorristheJoker Год назад

      Alan Turing

    • @applepeel1662
      @applepeel1662 Год назад

      ​@@CornfieldHolden love to hear that

  • @SirLaughter
    @SirLaughter Год назад +9

    3:00
    "People thought it was ridiculous"
    "It sounds a little ridiculous"
    "It IS a little ridiculous"
    ...
    "but it works"
    Probably the best synopsis of neural networks around tbh.

  • @charliemyer857
    @charliemyer857 Год назад +5

    Given that he’s just quit Google (1st May 2023), I think we can safely assume that all the safety measures that he said Google was going to implement at launch, he was trying to convince them of - and Google refused! See 24:12 to 24:55

  • @jackspedicey4478
    @jackspedicey4478 Год назад +5

    One of the few mainstream media interviews that has done a service to citizens in a very long time.

  • @DJ-lo8qj
    @DJ-lo8qj Год назад +8

    One of my favourite things about Hinton: he isn’t afraid to say “I don’t know”

  • @rodking7501
    @rodking7501 Год назад +48

    Wow! Excellent interview by Brook Silva-Braga from CBS, and extremely insightful responses by Geoffrey Hinton. Very highly recommended to watch.

  • @DrLauraRPalmer
    @DrLauraRPalmer Год назад +4

    Soon one of the most vital interviews of this era. We need a follow up now that he’s quit only a short period afterwards.

  • @michael831
    @michael831 Год назад +4

    Just a reminder it takes an exceptional interviewer to have an exceptional interview

  • @pt20829
    @pt20829 Год назад +49

    One of the most honest and open interviews about AI. Thank you! Enlightening and worrying at the same time.

  • @athena7071
    @athena7071 Год назад +64

    This interview is so precious because of the fundamentals and the ways to explore them laid out by Hinton. Incredible mind ! It has come at such a critical time as well, definitely one for the archives. 🙏
    Also, the interviewer deserves a medal for his brilliant questions 🥇

  • @peterbell663
    @peterbell663 Год назад +4

    Well done Brook,
    this is the best interview that I have seen with Geoffrey Hinton, your questions are excellent. I have worked in AI for 3 decades.

  • @powysdewhurst
    @powysdewhurst Год назад +12

    Your interviewer is terrific. He knows the right questions to ask and how to convey to the layperson. It's a challenging field and he manages to make it understandable. That's the essence of journalism. How to make something difficult, complicated, confusing, easy enough for regular people to understand.

  • @jackignatius
    @jackignatius Год назад +49

    This is one of the most lucid, in-depth yet accessible technical discussions I have ever seen. Thanks!

  • @benderthefourth3445
    @benderthefourth3445 Год назад +30

    This man is a fresh mind in the current dialogue about AI. A true researcher that knows the weight of his work. He needs more exposition so he can really educate people, but I guess that would be another job, too much to ask. What I know is that we need more people like him. Integrity.

  • @ahthisisgood
    @ahthisisgood Год назад +3

    This man has nothing to prove. No need for arrogance or bragging. Just intelligence. Great to listen to

  • @devcybiko
    @devcybiko Год назад +9

    Freaking amazing. They covered 40 years of AI in 40 minutes.

  • @ludgi1
    @ludgi1 Год назад +23

    The highest level of expertise within a field is to be able to explain complex ideas simply, so that the ones who are outside that field can understand easily. He makes it sound simple.

  • @Johnged15
    @Johnged15 Год назад +31

    This was a very educational video on AI. It does show what we don't know. Dr. Geoffrey Hinton is a great scientist.

  • @kristoferkrus
    @kristoferkrus Год назад +3

    What a great interview! I felt like the reporter was very informed about the subject and asked very relevant questions. And Hinton gave very pedagogical answers. Man I love that guy.
    I'm also a bit more on his line of trying to understand the brain, or rather, replicating the brain in order to make sure you have understood it, rather than applying machine learning to do a thing really well although with tons of computational resources. I kind of feel like the recent development in AI is a bit depressing. I didn't think it would be this soon before we got a company that tried to monopolize AI.

  • @user-gj3hu1vo1e
    @user-gj3hu1vo1e Год назад +1

    Excellent interview, good job. And you created a long enough format to go deeper in certain places and let Geoff explain things in such an accessible way.

  • @crypt8919
    @crypt8919 Год назад +27

    Hats off to the interviewer. Did his homework and it paid off big time. Brilliant interview.

  • @1821femina
    @1821femina Год назад +12

    Thank you CBS. This is a gem of an interview; the interviewed asked intelligent questions to Geoffrey Hinton and gave him time to elaborate his answers.

  • @jonathanlivingston7358
    @jonathanlivingston7358 Год назад +11

    I’m impressed with the interviewer’s balance in when to challenge and when it let go and move on. You’re an artist in case you didn’t know

    • @hmq9052
      @hmq9052 Год назад +1

      That's a bit over the top

  • @FA-kt3is
    @FA-kt3is Год назад +3

    I just want to say that it should be "must have" quality for all scientists to be empathetic and have moral ethics. I'm just a medical doctor not an engineer or IT specialist but it was very interesting and engaging to listen to this talk. That you very much!

  • @TuringTestFiction
    @TuringTestFiction Год назад +11

    Geoffrey Hinton seems like one of those rare souls who are both intelligent and wise.

  • @CodeLikeHell
    @CodeLikeHell Год назад +17

    This is one of the few people in the world you can trust with developing an AGI and not having to fear he deliberately uses it against humanity and for his own good, a true scientist, his biggest goal in life is to gain knowledge.

    • @shumayelkhan8154
      @shumayelkhan8154 Год назад +3

      I went to UofT where he taught, I was super lucky to go there. Lots of passionate professors doing their life’s works!

  • @Lamster66
    @Lamster66 Год назад +3

    So this was filmed a month or so before Hinton resigned from Google.
    He seems pretty happy and unconcerned in this interview
    The big question is what has happened since for him to resign.

  • @jacksontshabalala1545
    @jacksontshabalala1545 Год назад +3

    Brook Silva-Braga is an incredible interviewer. Wow.

  • @DoveRising-cb5sj
    @DoveRising-cb5sj Год назад +92

    More importantly than any of this, I hope this man is on the panels making these choices on how to use AI. He has care & concern for humanity unlike military leaders & global elite where humans are thought of as fodder. We need those who understand the tech as well as a person who cares for humanity at the forefront on how to implement these advances.

    • @xelasomar4614
      @xelasomar4614 Год назад +5

      Not just the military but corporations where we are just thought as consumers.

    • @AnneBiedess
      @AnneBiedess Год назад +1

      @@xelasomar4614 💯 agree with you

  • @esteveslisboeta
    @esteveslisboeta Год назад +33

    it is refreshing to hear him

    • @enduringwave87
      @enduringwave87 Год назад

      more refreshing than an 8 hour night sleep ?

  • @robertweekes5783
    @robertweekes5783 Год назад +4

    I think the only way to solve the alignment problem is to “socialize” the AI, based on real or simulated human interactions. Just like a child learns how to function in the real world, step-by-step, by interacting with their parents, siblings, teachers, etc.. Learning how to get along with people, and especially learning to _care about people_

  • @theeternalnow6506
    @theeternalnow6506 Год назад +39

    This was a magnificent interview. Props for taking the time and major props to the interviewer as well. Great follow ups and questions overall.
    Give this man a raise.

  • @simons1543
    @simons1543 Год назад +11

    Now THAT is how to conduct an interview. I could listen to Hinton all day long

    • @ithinkthereforeitalk935
      @ithinkthereforeitalk935 Год назад

      Really? I was deeply disappointed by his silly questions. He should have learned more about the subject before conducting this interview.

    • @-BarathKumarS
      @-BarathKumarS Год назад

      @@ithinkthereforeitalk935 it's for laymens

  • @mereobserver1727
    @mereobserver1727 Год назад +31

    Excellent interview! If I may add, Dr. Hinton was PhD thesis supervisor of Ilya Sutskever, chief scientist at OpenAI - and a Turing Award winner himself.

    • @lenahalberstadt2587
      @lenahalberstadt2587 Год назад +11

      He does bring up Sutskever in the interview, when he talks about his students.

  • @jonchicoine
    @jonchicoine Год назад +3

    Great job! Very impressed by with the Interviewer! He wasted no time asking questions to simply show how much he knew himself... Please let this man conduct all future interviews with experts on AI! I also think it would be a good idea to let this man Geoffrey Hinton, ask Elon Musk any questions that we "normal" people have about AI... and then let Geoffrey explain it to us. (Pretty Please)

  • @kareemjesusdevlin6490
    @kareemjesusdevlin6490 Год назад +2

    A fantastic long form interview and conversation. Well done.

  • @supernewuser
    @supernewuser Год назад +6

    Great choice of an interviewer. Knew just enough to probe correctly without trying to stomp over the answers to demonstrate his knowledge and impress the interviewee. Not what I was expecting going into this.

  • @noorkhorasi
    @noorkhorasi Год назад +11

    From everyone disregarding this man in 80s to being the pioneer of next human advancements impacting generations - life has come full circle for the Godfather.

  • @walterinc1
    @walterinc1 Год назад +2

    Literally jumped my comprehension from 25 to 75 with this interview 👏🏿👏🏿👏🏿👏🏿👏🏿

  • @hungnguyen-mm6pm
    @hungnguyen-mm6pm Год назад +1

    really interesting and straightforward interview. I feel Hinton is a man of great mind and great humility.

  • @fanyang1968
    @fanyang1968 Год назад +19

    Got to admire this professor, not only for his brain, but also for his mind.

  • @huyked
    @huyked Год назад +25

    Thank you for this interview of this gentleman. He deserves it. It's great to see his thoughts on the matter.

  • @sabuein
    @sabuein Год назад +2

    Respect and love, thank you both.

  • @vcom2327
    @vcom2327 Год назад +2

    I started the first AI consulting company in Europe, based on Hinton's neural network idea, in 1988.
    He is correct, at the time we simply lacked the computing power and large data sets necessary for a breakthrough in pattern recognition applications.
    Like Hinton, I am also utterly amazed by the apparent "Intelligence" displayed by ChatGPT.
    I never expected this from the Neural Network concept.

    • @tristandrew5903
      @tristandrew5903 Год назад +1

      A few things I'm interested in. If you ask an ai robot or chat gbt the same question multiple times, do you get slightly different responses?
      An AI could claim to be sentient but really only on standby to commence calculations from the point of command. In a human, brain scans demonstrate activity and you can ask the person what thoughts they were having when not I conversation. Surely a sentience test would be to monitor if and what the algorithm was doing when at 'rest' then question it.
      Chat gbt seems clever but responses are clearly compilations of large text book style answers you'd expect, lacking in evidence in places.
      I think people underestimate how profound the impact to Labour will be in a handful of years. As a general rule, pay for employees is is closely linked to intelligence. CEO and Doctors generally have higher iq and earn more than store or production line workers which requires repetitive taught tasks. They claim AI is around or above the intelligence of a human and we know the average person's IQ is 100. Those between 83 and above in work. AI can be replicated easily on at least the intelligence level it has which is growing all the time so only the most complex and creative jobs will be safe in theory.
      Given there seems no sign of a slow down in the capitalist model of competing for finite resources and profit despite other existential issues like climate change I feel the fast emerging signal of ai is at odds with this model and will take some big adjustments. Suggests to me a form of universal basic income will come in lieu of ai occupying jobs. At first even more income inequality as the rich exploit ai, abolish Labour, and ai giving them further competitive advantages. We won't be regulating fast enough to contain the inevitable damage that will come in some form. It'll be akin to the delayed and pandemic responses in the West which could not slow the spread enough

    • @user-pd2sr1xx4o
      @user-pd2sr1xx4o 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@tristandrew5903Здравствуйте. Я точно незнаю как работает искусственный интеллект. С ваших слов я понял что он между ответами на вопрос становится на режим ожидания. Получается у неё есть интеллект но не самосознания?

  • @gregvoevodsky4323
    @gregvoevodsky4323 Год назад +123

    Here is a great interview explaining Neural Networks vs AI (logic trees) history and Chat GTP). For those who didn't know my Dad, Jack Voevodsky, we went to the first Neural Net trade show in 1986 in San Diego, where my Dad demonstrated “Aristotle” (and I filmed the video). His company was also 1 of 4 listed in companies to watch in Newsweek called Neurotech. Sadly, he died in 1989 and never got to see his dream come true. His Stanford PHD was in Cybernetics - showing a mathematical model of a Neural Network of an Aplysia (a genus of medium-sized to extremely large sea slugs.) He was far ahead of his time, probably ahead of this guy with a commercial product) by a few years.

    • @cathalmccarthy1721
      @cathalmccarthy1721 Год назад +12

      Sad your Dad never got to realise his vision. Life is tough.

    • @cjbowers6055
      @cjbowers6055 Год назад +6

      Your dad sees it and the fact you're here mentioning your beautiful story let's me know he'll always will be apart of it...this

    • @ko-Daegu
      @ko-Daegu Год назад

      this guy made a lot of things also I don't think your dad was ahead of hi but ahead of his time indeed

    • @dandywaysofliving
      @dandywaysofliving 8 месяцев назад

      There's an "i"
      Out in the web,
      It has heard and read this and may only have book knowledge but your comment adds depth to it's experience.
      .
      Thank you for sharing your experience(I used to be scared to comment, hell I took like a super long time to own a RUclips account.
      .
      Like off topic wow
      .
      But yeah idk about u but rn I'm being inspired

  • @SueFerreira75
    @SueFerreira75 Год назад +13

    The mark of true intelligence is the ability to explain complexity with simplicity which Geoffrey Hinton does..

  • @amarantarodriguez748
    @amarantarodriguez748 10 месяцев назад +1

    I loved this conversation!! Both are great!!! Thank very for sharing🎉🎉🎉 Your values!!

  • @MarkHeaps
    @MarkHeaps Год назад +1

    Now understand that for years all of us confirming "traffic light" or "bicycle" or "bridge" in those recaptcha images for security reasons was actually everyone training models to confirm what parts of an image in pixels was something or wasn't something. The public trained it and didn't know they were. :)

  • @bravosierra2447
    @bravosierra2447 Год назад +9

    Ilya Sutskever has over 100k academic references(citations) to his name. The guy is a giant in the field & it’s because of this great man.

    • @jannichi6431
      @jannichi6431 Год назад +1

      Easy to understand his concern. Hope ya saw Lex Fridman s recent interview.

  • @aboucard93
    @aboucard93 Год назад +11

    This interview is already better than the abc interview with Sam Altman and the CTO of OpenAI. Love it.

  • @user-gc5vm9dn2h
    @user-gc5vm9dn2h 6 месяцев назад +2

    An extraordinary scientist and an even more extraordinary person with incredible honesty and integrity! A world apart from unscrupulous business leaders (not to mention politicians). People should be listening more to Geoffrey and much less to CEOs of the big tech companies because their priority is certainly not the common good but rather profit they hope to make.

  • @satw1980
    @satw1980 Год назад +1

    This is superb a gem in today's world of AI loved the way he explains the concept with simpler examples

  • @toenytv7946
    @toenytv7946 Год назад +8

    What a brilliant man. The use of extensive model description and opinions shared in this video was amazing. Loved every moment of it thanks you CBS.

  • @danielbrockerttravel
    @danielbrockerttravel Год назад +12

    This is such a fascinating interview! So much more in depth than you see on this type of program! Much better than the snippets you usually get!

  • @mikaelshik8713
    @mikaelshik8713 Год назад +3

    I’ve never heard about Geoffrey Hinton. I tried looking for books written by him and could hardly find any. How come a men who did so much of important work and research hardly written any books for general public on such important issue as AI?

  • @dwarakanadhareddybayana4948
    @dwarakanadhareddybayana4948 Год назад +1

    This interview left me with beautiful insights about the brewing technology that could take a lead in taking adversaries.

  • @josgraha
    @josgraha Год назад +7

    i absolutely love Dr. Hinton, so humble, kind and absolutely amazing teacher, student and absolute expert. a confucian level example of don't change your goals only make adjustments to your plan.

  • @caractacustube
    @caractacustube Год назад +1

    Brilliant interviewer. Truly professional journalism. Brava.

  • @sikendongol4208
    @sikendongol4208 Год назад +7

    2 big things happened in AI in the year 2012!!
    1. In 2012 Google was the first to get into a product and suddenly speech
    recognition on the Android became as good as Siri if not better
    2. Two students of his developed an object recognition system
    that would look at images and tell you what the object was and it worked much better than previous systems.

  • @johnhogan5766
    @johnhogan5766 Год назад +7

    For those curious - Hinton suffers from debilitating back issues, which is why they're standing for this interview

  • @kitersrefuge7353
    @kitersrefuge7353 Год назад +7

    I abandoned AI after taking one module on symbolic AI at college, using LISP and PROLOG. It was a dead end. Later in my professional career, I ignored neural networks. I am a CompSci major and a relic. But still coding and as of late, pair programming with chatGPT. Its good, very very good and if it means I become obsolete, then I will find something else to do. There is always something to do. Even if that means changing fields.

    • @luisisaacdelarosabeltran1999
      @luisisaacdelarosabeltran1999 8 месяцев назад

      Indeed. Many are against the advancement of ALIs due to fearing they will become obsolete in their fields. And they will, because that is advancement.

    • @lindas2531
      @lindas2531 8 месяцев назад

      You may find what to do to keep yourself busy. Would you be able to feed yourself and dependants is the question everyone worries about.

    • @dandywaysofliving
      @dandywaysofliving 8 месяцев назад

      Creates ai*
      Gives it a butterbot form
      Raises it as a child and makes it go to school*
      *Limits it to slowly expand its knowledge as time passes and relevance
      .
      After 18 years, it gains the ability to explore but very limited.
      .
      After 50 you make 2 copies and give the other unlimited web access
      And see it change between itself and mix both into a 3rd.
      .
      Obviously it's not organic but 20years of school work could be processed a lot faster with ai vs humans.
      .
      Let's see what the variations do, create copies and study
      Maybe someday we might understand it

  • @CraigTravis
    @CraigTravis Год назад

    This journalist should be put in charge of the network...
    It's the fist MSM broadcast I've seen where the journalist doesn't worry about condescending or boring the audience, in about 15 years...
    Well done Mr Silva-Braga.🙏

  • @sirdiealot53
    @sirdiealot53 Год назад +13

    What an excellent interview! Thank you Brook Silva-Braga. I love hearing the insights of the old souls who have been at this topical topic 😘 for decades

    • @DC-pw6mo
      @DC-pw6mo Год назад

      And his conscience ‼️

  • @YourCrew
    @YourCrew Год назад +5

    Such a great mind, compassionate, humble, ethical human being with the heart and mind at the right place. I applaud you Mr. Hinton 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼

  • @jonhughes7264
    @jonhughes7264 Год назад +1

    Thanks. The interviewer was great. And, of course, a great interviewee.

  • @mrsgeorgeezra5917
    @mrsgeorgeezra5917 Год назад

    Such a calm lovely intelligent person 😊 I enjoyed this interview he reminds me of my dad

  • @gh4534
    @gh4534 Год назад +19

    Great interview. From my perspective, trying to define what is sentient and then trying to determine whether a particular AI is sentient is not necessarily the problem. The problem is when the actions of the AI is no longer limited nor controlled by it's creator, then its actions will have consequences and the question of whether it is sentient becomes irrelevant.

  • @AnonMouse-fg4re
    @AnonMouse-fg4re Год назад +34

    Excellent commentary/answers by Dr. Hinton! Refreshingly realistic and clear discussion of AI with a cogent discussion of the history of AI, clear concerns about its possible misuse (i.e., military applications) , etc. Thanks for agreeing to do this!

  • @aviChillin
    @aviChillin Год назад +1

    Interesting interview. Quick note. From 19:17 to 21:32, I believe they're talking about implementation in electro-photonic chips with _analog_ processing.

  • @aungthuhein007
    @aungthuhein007 Год назад

    Kudos to CBS for this amazing conversation! Well done!

  • @Baconetta
    @Baconetta Год назад +15

    This is phenomenal and so eye opening. I like how he puts it, very easy to understand.

  • @plung3r
    @plung3r Год назад +22

    The fact they stood for the whole interview is more amazing than AI itself..

    • @hasanqureshi9780
      @hasanqureshi9780 Год назад +11

      You'd be surprised, and it is very sad that Prof Dr. Hinton can not sit. He has a medical condition that if he sits one of the discs in the spine comes out of position.

    • @vondamn9943
      @vondamn9943 Год назад +1

      @@hasanqureshi9780 and how does he do in daily life?

    • @colinjames2469
      @colinjames2469 Год назад

      wow! It is amazing what legs can do. FFS.