Ridley Scott Says We Have to Lock Down AI: “It’s a Technical Hydrogen Bomb”

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Rolling Stone has published a new interview with Ridley Scott, and among the topics, which include his new film Napoleon and “his movies getting hornier,” is a revelation about how the 85-year-old director is terrified of AI.

Here’s what Scott had to say about artificial intelligence, a topic that he’s touched upon with films like Blade Runner—and while he thinks AI should be “locked down,” it may be too late:

Rolling Stone: Several of your films have explored artificial intelligence. Does AI worry you?

Scott: I always thought the world would end up being run by two corporations, and I think we’re headed in that direction. Tyrell Corp in Blade Runner probably owned 45-50% of the world, and one of his playthings was creating replication through DNA. Tyrell thinks he’s god and in the first Blade Runner has made a Nexus female. And the Nexus female will have a limited lifespan because AI will get dangerous. We have to lock down AI. And I don’t know how you’re gonna lock it down. They have these discussions in the government, “How are we gonna lock down AI?” Are you fucking kidding? You’re never gonna lock it down. Once it’s out, it’s out. If I’m designing AI, I’m going to design a computer whose first job is to design another computer that’s cleverer than the first one. And when they get together, then you’re in trouble, because then it can take over the whole electrical-monetary system in the world and switch it off. That’s your first disaster. It’s a technical hydrogen bomb. Think about what that would mean?

Scott is then asked about AI being used to write movie scripts, something he thinks shouldn’t allowed because it’s soulless:

Rolling Stone: I wanted to ask you about what effect you think AI will have on Hollywood as it was a big sticking point in the writers’ strike, in particular. One fear is that studios will plug a book into AI, have it crap out an “adaptation,” and then pay actual screenwriters day rates to punch it up.

Scott: Yeah. They really have to not allow this, and I don’t know how you can control it. Another AI expert said, “We are way over-panicking. Of course, I have a computer that can defeat a chess master in an hour because we can feed him every conceivable move from data, and it’ll process 1,900 conceivable moves on what the person will do next in seconds, and the guy is in trouble.” There’s something non-creative about data. You’re gonna get a painting created by a computer, but I like to believe — and I’m saying this without confidence — it won’t work with anything particularly special that requires emotion or soul. With that said, I’m still worried about it.

Napoleon, which stars Joaquin Phoenix as the French emperor and military commander, is out now.

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Tsing Mui
News poster at The FPS Review.

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