Tuesday, August 26, 2025

Godfather of AI Warns that Super Intelligent Machines Could Replace Humanity

 We have seen many videos where a dude with a microphone goes on the street and asks adults questions like, "How many dimes are in a dollar?"  Or, "How many states make up the United States?"  Or, "3 times 3 times 3 is how much?"  The blank look on the faces of those asked says it all.  They simply have no clue.  It's pretty terrifying to see the dumbing down of America.  Why should anyone really KNOW anything in their brains when they can just ask SIRI or AI to answer any question they could possibly need to know?

Enter AI and it's ability to answer any question in 2 seconds.  If these machines and intelligence is so much smarter than humans, do we really need humans anymore?  Maybe we just need a few smart humans around but the 99% of folks are just taking up space and resources...right?

Geoffrey Hinton, the pioneering computer scientist called the “godfather of AI,” has once again sounded the alarm that the very technology he helped bring to life could spell the end of humanity as we know it.

In an interview clip released Aug. 18 as part of the forthcoming film “Making God,” Hinton delivered one of his starkest warnings yet. He said that humanity risks being sidelined—and eventually replaced—by machines far smarter than ourselves.

“Most people aren’t able to comprehend the idea of things more intelligent than us,” Hinton, a Nobel Prize winner for physics and a former Google executive, said in the clip.

“They always think, ‘Well, how are we going to use this thing?’ They don’t think, ‘Well, how’s it going to use us?’”

Hinton said he is “fairly confident” that artificial intelligence will drive massive unemployment, pointing to early examples of tech giants such as Microsoft replacing junior programmers with AI. But the larger danger, he said, goes far beyond the workplace.

“The risk I’ve been warning about the most ... is the risk that we’ll develop an AI that’s much smarter than us, and it will just take over,” Hinton said.

“It won’t need us anymore.”

The only silver lining is that “it won’t eat us, because it’ll be made of silicon,” he said.

That work earned him the 2024 Nobel Prize in Physics, awarded “for foundational discoveries and inventions that enable machine learning with artificial neural networks.”

The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences noted how Hinton’s early use of statistical physics provided the conceptual leap that made today’s AI revolution possible.

But Hinton has since emerged as one of the field’s fiercest critics, warning that its rapid development has outpaced society’s ability to keep it safe. In 2023, he resigned from his role at Google so he could speak freely about the risks without implicating the company.

In his Nobel lecture, Hinton acknowledged the potential benefits of AI—such as productivity gains and new medical treatments that could be a “wonderful advance for all humanity.” Yet he also warned that creating digital beings more intelligent than humans poses an “existential threat.”

Hinton has previously estimated that there is a 10 percent to 20 percent chance that AI could wipe out humanity. In a June episode of The Diary of a CEO podcast, he said that the engineers behind today’s AI systems don’t fully understand the technology and broadly fall into two camps: one that believes in a dystopian future where humans are displaced, and the other that dismisses such fears as science fiction.

“I think both of those positions are extreme,” Hinton said.

“I often say 10 percent to 20 percent chance [for AI] to wipe us out. But that’s just gut, based on the idea that we’re still making them and we’re pretty ingenious. And the hope is that if enough smart people do enough research with enough resources, we’ll figure out a way to build them so they’ll never want to harm us.”

At the Las Vegas conference, Hinton offered a novel idea for how to mitigate the danger: Instead of trying to force AI systems into submission, researchers should design them with “maternal instincts” so they would want to protect humans even as they grow smarter.

Here;  ‘Godfather of AI’ Warns Superintelligent Machines Could Replace Humanity | The Epoch Times

Hmmm...a 10 percent to 20 percent chance that AI could wipe out humanity.  Sounds a lot like what is going to happen during the Great Tribulation on earth.

That is quite a statement coming for the dude who probably knows most about AI.

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