...
...
Next Story

Vishal Mathur picks his favourite read of 2024

Decoding some tough realities about AI and how certain AI simply does not work as it is supposed to, or as advertised by tech companies

Published on: Dec 27, 2024 03:30 PM IST
Advertisement

Chatbots, image generators, music creation tools and photo editing are just some of the use cases being redefined by artificial intelligence (AI). Amidst this relentless hype, Arvind Narayanan, computer science professor at Princeton University and Sayash Kapoor, PhD candidate in computer science at Princeton, in their book titled AI Snake Oil, decode some tough realities that often remain hidden behind the scenes. It is clear that Generative AI is rapidly moving forward. How else would you be able to generate a photo that realistically recreates the prompt “a cow in a kitchen wearing a pink sweater”? Once the fun and games are over, it isn’t too difficult to notice that this technology is still immature at best, and highly unreliable when it is spewing incorrect facts or misinformation.

On how AI technology is still immature at best, and highly unreliable too. (Princeton University Press)
On how AI technology is still immature at best, and highly unreliable too. (Princeton University Press)

Narayanan talks about how certain AI simply does not work as it is supposed to, or as advertised by tech companies. “A major societal problem” is upon us, because humans seem incapable or unwilling to identify AI that works from ones that don’t, and to correct AI when it makes a mistake. The book points to another type of AI that’s increasingly finding traction, called predictive AI. Unlike the technology shown in the film Minority Report, real-world applications are proving problematic. “Predictive AI makes consequential decisions about people applying for jobs, loans, or in criminal justice systems. This dubious AI predicts who will commit crimes or repay loans. These predictions are difficult, and the systems are being used unjustly,” Narayanan said, while speaking with HT.

Vishal Mathur (Courtesy the subject)
 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Vishal Mathur

Vishal Mathur is Technology Editor for Hindustan Times. When not making sense of technology, he often searches for an elusive analog space in a digital world.

SHARE THIS ARTICLE ON
Hindustantimes wants to start sending you push notifications. Click allow to subscribe