Warren Buffett has sounded the alarm about artificial intelligence (AI), stating that technology could increase fraud by making con artists more persuasive than ever.
The well-known investor and CEO of Berkshire remarked, “Scamming has always been part of the American scene,” on Saturday at his company’s annual shareholder meeting.
However, Buffett claimed that artificial intelligence-generated photos and movies have gotten so good that it’s nearly impossible to determine whether they’re real.
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“When you think of the potential of scamming people … if I was interested in scamming, it’s going to be the growth industry of all time,” he stated. He remembered watching a deep fake video of himself being used by a con artist to defraud others out of their money. “I practically would have sent money to myself over in some crazy country,” he joked.
In keeping with his remarks at the Berkshire meeting the previous year, Buffett likewise compared the development of AI to the invention of the atomic bomb. “We let the genie out of the bottle when we developed nuclear weapons,” he stated. “That genie has been acting badly recently. I’m terrified as hell of the genie’s power. AI bears some similarities,” Buffett continued. “We may wish we’d never seen that genie.”
Years before ChatGPT was released, the billionaire praised AI’s immense potential, but he made it clear that he is not an expert in emerging technology. “I don’t know anything about AI, but that doesn’t mean I deny its existence or importance or anything of the sort,” he stated.
According to a Wall Street Journal (WSJ) article, business executives are debating the potential social effects of artificial intelligence (AI) simultaneously, as Buffett remarks. Even though not everyone likens the technology to the atomic bomb, others fear AI may eliminate white-collar jobs.
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Some see benefits from AI. AI may aid in the development of cancer treatments or possibly allow more people to live to be 100 years old, according to Jamie Dimon, the CEO of JPMorgan Chase.
It will lead to job creation. This will lead to the elimination of some jobs. Everyone will thus be more productive, Dimon said in a recent WSJ interview.
According to a Market.US analysis, the global market for artificial intelligence in education is expected to grow from $3.6 billion in 2023 to about $73.7 billion by 2033. The fluctuations within the sector are highlighted by the recent stock decrease of Chegg, an online education company that has invested in artificial intelligence techniques, despite this encouraging prognosis.