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Apple cofounder Steve Wozniak says he's not concerned about AI anymore (AAPL)

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Steve Wozniak at Festival of Marketing

PayPal billionaire Elon Musk, Microsoft cofounder Bill Gates, and renowned scientist Stephen Hawking have all said artificial intelligence (AI) has the potential to harm to humanity if it's not developed in the right way.

But Apple cofounder Steve Wozniak told Business Insider in an interview this week that he's no longer concerned about AI. He said he reversed his thinking on AI for several reasons.

"One being that Moore’s Law isn’t going to make those machines smart enough to think really the way a human does," said Wozniak. "Another is when machines can out think humans they can’t be as intuitive and say what will I do next and what is an approach that might get me there. They can’t figure out those sorts of things.

"We aren’t talking about artificial intelligence actually getting to that point. [At the moment] It’s sort of like it magically might arise on its own. These machines might become independent thinkers. But if they do, they’re going to be partners of humans over all other species just forever."

Nick BostromWozniak's comments contrast with what Swedish philosopher Nick Bostrom said at the IP Expo tech conference in London on the same day.

The academic believes that machines will achieve human-level artificial intelligence in the coming decades, before quickly going on to acquire what he describes as "superintelligence," which is also the title of a book he authored on the topic.

Bostrom, who heads the Future of Humanity Institute at the University of Oxford, thinks that humans could one day become slaves to a superior race of machines. This doomsday scenario can be avoided, however, if self-thinking machines are developed from the very beginning in a way that ensures they're going to act in the interest of the human race.

Bostrom said this doesn't mean we have to "tie its hands behind its back and hold a big stick over it in the hope we can force it to our way" but rather developers and tech companies must "build it in such a way that it's on our side and wants the same things as we do."

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