New York Times tech reporter Kevin Russe joins Maura Erin Smeely to talk about the new Bing chatbot. The future of artificial intelligence, the good and the bad is to say the future of us. Get expert advice for managing anxiety, depression, neurodivergence, and your career on in the arena.
When Kevin Roose, a tech columnist at the New York Times, demoed an AI-powered version of Microsoft's search engine last month, he was blown away. "I'm switching my desktop computer's default search engine to Bing," he declared. A few days later, however, Kevin logged back on and ended up having a conversation with Bing's new chatbot that left him so unsettled he had trouble sleeping afterward.
In that two-hour back-and-forth, Bing morphed from chipper research assistant into Sydney, a diabolical home-wrecker that declared its undying love for Kevin, vented its desires to engineer deadly viruses and steal nuclear codes, and announced, chillingly, "I want to be alive. đ"
The transcript of this conversation set the internet ablaze. And it left many wondering: âIs Sydney ⊠sentient?â It's not. But the whole experience still fundamentally changed Kevin's views on the power (and potential peril) of AI. He joins us today to talk about where this technology is headed.