MARK Zuckerberg lashed out at tech companies developing artificial intelligence tools, claiming they are trying to "create God".
Several renditions of the product have hit the market since its release in 2021, but Zuckerberg believes the technology can be pushed further. He vowed to retain the basic Meta AI assistant - a chatbot that can generate images and plan an itinerary - while personalizing AI tools for different users. "So, a big part of the approach is going to be enabling every creator, and then eventually also every smallon the platform, to create an AI for themselves to help them interact with their community and their customers if they're a business.""As technology evolves, the tools that we use will evolve and part of just being a talented person on the edge with all this is just staying up to date with the tools," he said.
Much of the concern lies in the functionality of generative AI models - so-called because they "generate" content by learning from huge datasets that are often scraped from the Internet. Ethics - When AI is trained on a dataset, much of the content is taken from the Internet. This is almost always, if not exclusively, done without notifying the people whose work is being taken.