Zürcher Nachrichten - Geoffrey Hinton, soft-spoken godfather of AI

EUR -
AED 4.02877
AFN 75.137416
ALL 98.524785
AMD 424.940222
ANG 1.977233
AOA 992.645733
ARS 1069.136025
AUD 1.629765
AWG 1.974323
AZN 1.870278
BAM 1.953335
BBD 2.215205
BDT 131.104575
BGN 1.953368
BHD 0.413406
BIF 3173.723957
BMD 1.096846
BND 1.429696
BOB 7.581296
BRL 6.062711
BSD 1.097116
BTN 92.056648
BWP 14.541519
BYN 3.59047
BYR 21498.181978
BZD 2.211489
CAD 1.499553
CDF 3153.432063
CHF 0.940873
CLF 0.037163
CLP 1025.430531
CNY 7.738033
CNH 7.741676
COP 4648.850231
CRC 568.682447
CUC 1.096846
CUP 29.06642
CVE 110.72696
CZK 25.325775
DJF 195.368144
DKK 7.458235
DOP 65.996727
DZD 145.780104
EGP 53.304632
ERN 16.45269
ETB 133.193924
FJD 2.437466
FKP 0.835313
GBP 0.837831
GEL 3.010841
GGP 0.835313
GHS 17.455656
GIP 0.835313
GMD 75.682169
GNF 9469.052119
GTQ 8.485983
GYD 229.424242
HKD 8.527566
HNL 27.281577
HRK 7.457468
HTG 144.586245
HUF 399.592521
IDR 17177.0474
ILS 4.128254
IMP 0.835313
INR 92.104682
IQD 1437.286458
IRR 46163.514917
ISK 148.699087
JEP 0.835313
JMD 173.251394
JOD 0.777336
JPY 162.69572
KES 141.537189
KGS 93.298926
KHR 4449.304818
KMF 491.717767
KPW 987.160796
KRW 1476.804815
KWD 0.336296
KYD 0.914338
KZT 534.710936
LAK 24226.210928
LBP 98247.142062
LKR 321.464382
LRD 211.750886
LSL 19.159225
LTL 3.238701
LVL 0.663471
LYD 5.247379
MAD 10.755028
MDL 19.30946
MGA 5033.602798
MKD 61.541836
MMK 3562.513085
MNT 3727.082724
MOP 8.785754
MRU 43.436193
MUR 50.750449
MVR 16.836415
MWK 1902.412847
MXN 21.265157
MYR 4.701632
MZN 70.087381
NAD 19.159225
NGN 1777.087827
NIO 40.37905
NOK 11.758908
NPR 147.297143
NZD 1.793744
OMR 0.422333
PAB 1.097106
PEN 4.105487
PGK 4.311599
PHP 62.369987
PKR 304.593669
PLN 4.309179
PYG 8553.207715
QAR 4.000153
RON 4.976937
RSD 117.032395
RUB 105.903857
RWF 1497.583069
SAR 4.118226
SBD 9.080473
SCR 14.736021
SDG 659.747562
SEK 11.371891
SGD 1.430342
SHP 0.835313
SLE 25.059973
SLL 23000.306961
SOS 627.003142
SRD 34.770324
STD 22702.498076
SVC 9.599887
SYP 2755.858459
SZL 19.152136
THB 36.799019
TJS 11.673252
TMT 3.84993
TND 3.37445
TOP 2.568918
TRY 37.596265
TTD 7.437548
TWD 35.356937
TZS 2988.90535
UAH 45.176362
UGX 4031.912605
USD 1.096846
UYU 45.352775
UZS 14054.266577
VEF 3973382.326997
VES 40.576225
VND 27251.139349
VUV 130.219763
WST 3.068386
XAF 655.112473
XAG 0.03614
XAU 0.00042
XCD 2.964282
XDR 0.81617
XOF 655.112473
XPF 119.331742
YER 274.539899
ZAR 19.266127
ZMK 9872.930966
ZMW 29.100751
ZWL 353.183971
  • RBGPF

    -0.2800

    60.52

    -0.46%

  • RYCEF

    0.0900

    6.97

    +1.29%

  • VOD

    -0.0150

    9.675

    -0.16%

  • CMSC

    -0.0300

    24.54

    -0.12%

  • RELX

    0.5250

    46.565

    +1.13%

  • AZN

    -0.1850

    76.685

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    -0.5050

    38.125

    -1.32%

  • BTI

    -0.0200

    35.18

    -0.06%

  • NGG

    0.5200

    66

    +0.79%

  • SCS

    0.0300

    12.98

    +0.23%

  • RIO

    -3.1390

    66.481

    -4.72%

  • CMSD

    0.1480

    24.938

    +0.59%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.2

    +0.15%

  • BP

    -1.1940

    31.946

    -3.74%

  • BCC

    0.4250

    141.695

    +0.3%

  • BCE

    -0.2660

    33.264

    -0.8%

Geoffrey Hinton, soft-spoken godfather of AI
Geoffrey Hinton, soft-spoken godfather of AI / Photo: Geoff Robins - AFP/File

Geoffrey Hinton, soft-spoken godfather of AI

For a brief moment in spring last year, the bird-like features of bespectacled British-born researcher Geoffrey Hinton were poking out from TV screens across the world.

Text size:

Hinton, a big name in the world of artificial intelligence but largely unknown outside it, was warning that the technology he had helped to create -- for which he was awarded the 2024 Nobel Prize -- could pose an existential threat to humanity.

"What do you think the chances are of AI wiping out humanity," a reporter from the US network CBS News asked in March last year.

"It's not inconceivable," replied Hinton, making a very British understatement.

A few weeks later, he had walked away from his job at Google and was giving interviews to media across the world, quickly becoming the poster-child for AI doomsayers.

- Difficult family life -

Hinton, a 76-year-old soft-spoken career academic, was born in London, raised in Bristol and went to the universities of Cambridge and Edinburgh.

He has described his early life as a high pressure existence, trying to live up to the expectations of a family with an illustrious history, littered with storied scientists.

Even his father was a member of the Royal Society.

He told Toronto Life magazine he had struggled with depression his whole life and work was a way of releasing the pressure.

But Hinton has rarely been able to fully escape into his work.

His first wife died from cancer shortly after the couple had adopted their two children in the early 1990s, thrusting him into the role of single parent.

"I cannot imagine how a woman with children can have an academic career," he told Toronto Life.

"I'm used to being able to spend my time just thinking about ideas... But with small kids, it's just not on."

- 'Utterly correct' -

After spending time in universities in the United States in the late 1970s and 1980s, Hinton relocated to Toronto in 1987, his base ever since.

Hinton, a self-professed socialist who recalls his family stuffing envelopes for the British Labour Party, had been unwilling to accept funding from the US military, which was the biggest funder for his kind of research.

The Canadian government agreed to back his research, which attempted to replicate the functioning of the human brain by engineering artificial "neural networks".

Although he spent years on the academic fringes, a research community grew up around him in the Canadian city, and eventually his vision came to dominate the field.

And then Google came knocking.

He took a job with the Silicon Valley juggernaut in 2013 and suddenly became one of the central figures in the emerging industry.

As competition ramped up, many of his students took posts in companies including Meta, Apple and Uber.

Ilya Sutskever, who founded OpenAI, worked in Hinton's team for years and has described the time as "critical" for his career.

He told Toronto University's website in 2017 they pursued "ideas that were both highly unappreciated by most scientists, yet turned out to be utterly correct".

But Sutskever and Hinton have emerged as prominent worriers about the technology -- Sutskever was pushed out of OpenAI for raising concerns about their products a year after Hinton exited Google.

And true to form, even during his acceptance speech for the Nobel Prize -- he received the news in a "cheap hotel in California" -- Hinton was still talking of regret rather than success.

"In the same circumstances, I would do the same again," he said.

"But I am worried that the overall consequence of this might be systems more intelligent than us that eventually take control."

T.L.Marti--NZN