Experts debate how to create a more humane AI-and save it from the 'Silicon Valley tech bros'
Briefly

Following the release of ChatGPT in late 2023, the private sector, especially Big Tech and startups, has taken a leading role in AI development. Experts at the Fortune Brainstorm AI Singapore conference emphasized the need for AI to adopt a more humane and interdisciplinary approach. They argue that collaborative efforts between human perspectives and AI can improve policymaking. The significance of a multi-stakeholder ecosystem involving academia, civil society, government, and industry was highlighted as crucial for the responsible development of this transformative technology. Public skepticism remains around AI's reliability and biases.
AI needs to "think better," not just faster and cheaper, focusing on broader perspectives to enhance human-AI collaboration and policymaking effectiveness.
AI is a "civilization-changing technology" that requires collaboration among academia, civil society, government, and industry to ensure responsible development and usage.
Industry really needs to be a leader in this space, but academia does too, as it has the ability to train future "AI leaders" and publish vital information.
Many users fall into two categories: proponents engaging in "uncritical use" of AI, and critics advocating for "critical non-use" due to concerns about bias and transparency.
Read at Fortune Asia
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