• About
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Contact
Wednesday, July 9, 2025
  • Login
Best Technologies
  • Home
  • News
  • Tech
  • Spotlight

    Beyond Short-Term Fixes: How Themis Ecosystem Brings Long-Term Green Solutions

    A look inside both the Legion Go and Steam Deck OLED

    Construction robot builds massive stone walls on its own

    Receive an alert when one of your contacts is about to have a special day

    Here are the best iPad deals right now

    Here are the best smart locks you can buy right now

    Biomass Ultima Micro: A Smart Innovation That Solves a Big Problem

    What is an ‘AI prompt engineer’ and does every company need one?

    Recycled coffee grounds can be used to make stronger concrete

  • Business
  • Space
  • Videos
  • More
    • Mobile
    • Windows
    • Energy
    • Security
    • Health
    • Entertainment
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Tech
  • Spotlight

    Beyond Short-Term Fixes: How Themis Ecosystem Brings Long-Term Green Solutions

    A look inside both the Legion Go and Steam Deck OLED

    Construction robot builds massive stone walls on its own

    Receive an alert when one of your contacts is about to have a special day

    Here are the best iPad deals right now

    Here are the best smart locks you can buy right now

    Biomass Ultima Micro: A Smart Innovation That Solves a Big Problem

    What is an ‘AI prompt engineer’ and does every company need one?

    Recycled coffee grounds can be used to make stronger concrete

  • Business
  • Space
  • Videos
  • More
    • Mobile
    • Windows
    • Energy
    • Security
    • Health
    • Entertainment
No Result
View All Result
Best Technologies
No Result
View All Result
Home News

The dangers of so-called AI experts believing their own hype

by News Room
July 3, 2025
in News
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Demis Hassabis, CEO of Google DeepMind and a Nobel prizewinner for his role in developing the AlphaFold AI algorithm for predicting protein structures, made an astonishing claim on the 60 Minutes show in April. With the help of AI like AlphaFold, he said, the end of all disease is within reach, “maybe within the next decade or so”. With that, the interview moved on.

To those actually working on drug development and curing disease, this claim is laughable. According to medicinal chemist Derek Lowe, who has worked for decades on drug discovery, Hassabis’s statements “make me want to spend some time staring silently out the window, mouthing unintelligible words to myself”. But you don’t need to be an expert to recognise the hyperbole: the idea that all disease will be ended in around a decade is absurd.

Some have suggested that Hassabis’s remarks are just another example of tech leaders overpromising, perhaps to attract investors and funding. Isn’t this just like Elon Musk making silly forecasts about Martian colonies, or OpenAI’s Sam Altman claiming that artificial general intelligence (AGI) is just around the corner? But while that cynical view may have some validity, it lets these experts off the hook and underestimates the problem.

It is one thing when seeming authorities make grand claims outside their area of expertise (see Stephen Hawking on AI, aliens and space travel). But it might appear as if Hassabis is staying in his lane here. His Nobel citation mentions new pharmaceuticals as a potential benefit of AlphaFold’s predictions, and the algorithm’s release was accompanied by endless media headlines about revolutionising drug discovery.

Likewise, when his fellow 2024 Nobel laureate Geoffrey Hinton, formerly an AI adviser with Google, claimed that the large language models (LLMs) he helped create work in a way that resembles human learning, he seemed to be speaking from deep knowledge. So never mind the cries of protest from those researching human cognition – and, in some cases, on AI too.

What such instances seem to reveal is that, weirdly, some of these AI experts appear to mirror their products: they are able to produce remarkable results while having an understanding of them that is, at best, skin deep and brittle.

Here is another example: Daniel Kokotajlo, a researcher who quit OpenAI over concerns about its work towards AGI and is now executive director of the AI Futures Project in California, has said: “We’re catching our AIs lying, and we’re pretty sure they knew that the thing they were saying was false.” His anthropomorphic language of knowledge, intentions and deceit shows Kokotajlo has lost sight of what LLMs really are.

The dangers of supposing these experts know best are exemplified in Hinton’s comment in 2016 that, thanks to AI, “people should stop training radiologists now”. Luckily, experts in radiology didn’t believe him, although some suspect a link between his remark and growing concerns from medical students about job prospects in radiology. Hinton has since revised that claim – but imagine how much more force it would have had if he had already been given the Nobel. The same applies to Hassabis’s comments on disease: the idea that AI will do the heavy lifting could engender complacency, when we need the exact opposite, both scientifically and politically.

These “expert” prophets tend to get very little pushback from the media, and I can personally attest that even some smart scientists believe them. Many government leaders also give the impression they have swallowed the hype of tech CEOs and Silicon Valley gurus. But I recommend we start treating their pronouncements like those of LLMs themselves, meeting their superficial confidence with scepticism until fact-checked.

Philip Ball is a science writer based in London. His latest book is How Life Works

Topics:

  • artificial intelligence/
  • technology

Source: New Scientist

Tags: artificial intelligencetechnology

Related Posts

News

This Ultra-Thin Drumhead Moves Sound With Almost No Loss – And May Change Tech Forever

July 9, 2025
News

Breaking the Bottleneck: All-Optical Chip Could Unlock Light-Speed Communication

July 9, 2025
News

‘Flashes of brilliance and frustration’: I let an AI agent run my day

July 8, 2025
News

Concrete goes green: UW and Microsoft use seaweed to create novel carbon-trapping cement

July 8, 2025
News

Pokee AI, a new AI agent startup led by ex-Meta manager, lands $12M to automate online workflows

July 8, 2025
News

DoorDash slams Seattle over driver deactivation law, adds new service fees

July 8, 2025

Trending Now

Plugin Install : Popular Post Widget need JNews - View Counter to be installed

Latest News

Entertainment

HBO Max is officially HBO Max again

July 9, 2025
Tech

Some Prime Day deals on robot vacuums that suck — and mop

July 9, 2025
Business

China Has Attempted What Might Be the First-Ever Orbital Refueling of a Satellite

July 9, 2025
Security

You Don’t Need an iPad, but Do You Want One? Then These Prime Day Apple Deals Are for You

July 9, 2025
Mobile

Past Pixel problem resurfaces again creating chaos in users' lives

July 9, 2025
Tech

The 198 Prime Day 2025 deals you can still get

July 9, 2025
Best Technologies

Best Technologies™ is an online tech news portal. It started as an honest effort to provide unbiased and well-suited information on the latest and trending tech news.

Sections

  • Business
  • Energy
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Mobile
  • News
  • Security
  • Space
  • Spotlight
  • Tech
  • Windows

Browse by Topic

AI amazon amazon prime day android Apple apps artificial intelligence buying guides cars deals Donald Trump elon musk energy Entertainment film gadgets gaming google health household how to iOS Meta microsoft mobile news Nintendo OpenAI phones policy politics privacy review reviews Roundup science security shopping smart home social media space streaming Tech Wearable Xbox

Recent Posts

  • HBO Max is officially HBO Max again
  • Some Prime Day deals on robot vacuums that suck — and mop
  • China Has Attempted What Might Be the First-Ever Orbital Refueling of a Satellite
  • About
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Contact

© 2022 All Right Reserved - Blue Planet Global Media Network

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Tech
  • Spotlight
  • Business
  • Space
  • Videos
  • More
    • Mobile
    • Windows
    • Energy
    • Security
    • Health
    • Entertainment

© 2022 All Right Reserved - Blue Planet Global Media Network

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.