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Nobel laureates among more than 200 experts urging action on AI's economic impact

More than 200 researchers and economists, including 15 Nobel laureates and researchers at OpenAI, Anthropic and ​Google, have called for governments and technology leaders ‌to urgently create policies and institutions to address the economic impact of AI. They issued the jointly signed statement on Monday, warning ​that AI could drive a larger economic transformation ​than the Industrial Revolution but one that is "vastly ⁠shorter" in time frame, raising questions for workers, ​companies and public institutions. The statement has called for deeper research ​on AI's economic impacts and to start building policies and institutions required to ensure the technology benefits society and to navigate risks ​such as large-scale job displacement. "Steam, electricity, and computers ​each gave societies decades to adapt. AI may give us only a ‌few years," said Anton Korinek, professor at the University of Virginia. Read More: UN digital agency launches initiative to boost trust in AI agents "We cannot improvise our strategy and institutions in the middle of the transformation; waiting for certainty means arriving ​too late." Korinek, who ​joined Anthropic's ⁠economic research team in March, organised the initiative with fellow economists Erik Brynjolfsson, Ajay ​Agrawal and Tom Cunningham. Its signatories include OpenAI ​finance ⁠chief Sarah Friar, Google DeepMind Chief Scientist Jeff Dean, Anthropic co-founder Jack Clark and people on the economics research ⁠team at ​the Claude chatbot maker. Nobel laureates ​Michael Spence, Daron Acemoglu and Simon Johnson, among others, also signed the ​statement.

from Latest Technology News, Tech News Pakistan | The Express Tribune https://ift.tt/CHsFdeP
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