> From: Alexander <http://www.umass.edu/~a> > Date: Mon, 25 May 2020 10:58:19 -0400 > > Thought you might be interested in this. Thanks. Had trouble with my email, and it looks like this already happened. Hope it was good! > ---------- Forwarded message --------- > From: Shlomo Zilberstein <http://www.cs.umass.edu/~shlomo> > Date: Mon, May 25, 2020 at 8:31 AM > Subject: Stuart Russell on "Provably beneficial AI" > To: <http://www.cs.umass.edu/~seminars>, <http://www.cs.umass.edu/~equate> > > If you are looking for some intellectual stimulation, Stuart Russell (UC > ) will be giving a Turing lecture > on Tuesday, May 26, 11am (EST). > > Title: Provably beneficial AI > > To register go to > https://www.turing.ac.uk/events/turing-lecture-provably-beneficial-ai > > Abstract: > It is reasonable to expect that AI capabilities will eventually exceed > those of humans across a range of real-world-decision making > scenarios. Should this be a cause for concern, as Elon Musk, Stephen > Hawking, and others have suggested? While some in the mainstream AI > community dismiss the issue, Professor Russell will argue instead that > a fundamental reorientation of the field is required. Instead of > building systems that optimise arbitrary objectives, we need to learn > how to build systems that will, in fact, be beneficial for us. > > In this talk, he will show that it is useful to imbue systems with > explicit uncertainty concerning the true objectives of the humans they > are designed to help. This uncertainty causes machine and human > behaviour to be inextricably (and game-theoretically) linked, while > opening up many new avenues for research. The ideas in this talk are > described in more detail in his new book, "Human Compatible: AI and > the Problem of Control" (Viking/Penguin, 2019). >