The British “BBC” network reported, “Mark Zuckerberg is said to have begun work on Koolau Farm, a 1,400-acre farm on the Hawaiian island of Kauai, since 2014. The project is scheduled to include a complete shelter equipped with its own power and food supplies, although the carpenters and electricians working on the site are prohibited from talking about the project under non-disclosure agreements, according to a report Published by Wired magazine. A six-foot wall blocked the project’s view of the nearby road. When asked last year if he was building a death bunker, the Facebook founder said no, explaining that the underground space, which is about 5,000 square feet, “is like a little bunker, it’s more like a basement.” But this did not stop the speculation.”

According to the network, “There is also speculation about other technology leaders, some of whom appear to have been busy purchasing plots of land containing underground spaces, ready to be converted into luxury multi-million dollar bunkers. Reed Hoffman, co-founder of LinkedIn, has spoken of “apocalypse insurance,” and has previously claimed that half of the wealthy enjoy this insurance, as New Zealand is considered the A popular destination for buying homes. Is it really possible that they are preparing for war, the effects of climate change, or any other catastrophic event we don’t know about yet? In the past few years, the development of artificial intelligence has been added to the list of potential existential problems, and many are deeply concerned about the speed of this development. Ilya Sutskever, chief scientist and co-founder of Open AI, is said to be one of them. “of them.”

The network continued, “By mid-2023, the San Francisco-based company had launched ChatGPT, and the company was quickly working on updates. But by that summer, Sutskever had become increasingly convinced that computer scientists were on the verge of developing artificial general intelligence (AGI). At a meeting, Sutskever suggested to his colleagues that they dig an underground bunker for the company’s leading scientists before launching Such powerful technology over the world. He was widely reported to have said: “We will definitely build a bunker before we launch AGI,” although it is not clear who he meant by “us.” This highlights a curious fact: many prominent computer scientists and technology leaders, some of whom are working hard to develop a highly intelligent form of artificial intelligence, also seem deeply afraid of what AI can do. artificial one day. So, when exactly will artificial general intelligence appear? Could it prove transformative enough to scare ordinary people?”

The network added, “Technology leaders have claimed that general artificial intelligence is imminent, and Sam Altman, head of OpenAI, said in December 2024 that it will come “faster than most people in the world expect.” In fact, there are those who doubt it. “They are constantly changing their goals,” says Wendy Hall, a professor of computer science at the University of Southampton. It depends on who you talk to,” she added. “The scientific community says AI technology is amazing, but it is nowhere near human intelligence.” Babak Hodjat, chief technology officer at Cognizant Technologies, agrees that a number of “fundamental breakthroughs” will be necessary first. Moreover, AI is unlikely to come suddenly, and AI is a fast technology. Evolution is on a long journey, and there are many companies around the world racing to develop their own versions. But one of the reasons this idea is interesting to some in Silicon Valley is that it is seen as a precursor to something much more advanced: artificial superintelligence, a technology that goes beyond human intelligence.”

According to the network, “Supporters of artificial general intelligence and advanced artificial intelligence are very optimistic about their benefits. They claim that they will contribute to finding new treatments for deadly diseases, solving the problem of climate change, and providing an inexhaustible source of clean energy. Elon Musk even claimed that super-intelligent artificial intelligence may herald the era of “universal high income,” and he recently supported The idea that artificial intelligence will become so cheap and widespread that almost anyone will want to have “personal robots R2-D2 and C-3PO.” “There is a scary side, of course. Could terrorists hijack technology and use it as a massive weapon, or what if they decide on their own that humanity is the cause of the world’s problems and are destroying us?”

The network continued, “If it’s smarter than you, we have to contain it,” Tim Berners-Lee, the creator of the World Wide Web, warned speaking to the BBC earlier this month. “We have to be able to stop it,” he added. Indeed, governments are taking some preventative measures, and there are also those very wealthy people who have their own insurance plans against the end of the world. Lawrence, a professor of machine learning at the University of Cambridge, says this debate itself is nonsense. “The idea of artificial general intelligence is as absurd as the idea of an ‘artificial general vehicle,'” he added. Vince Lynch, CEO of California-based IV.AI, is also concerned about exaggerated statements about artificial general intelligence. “It’s great marketing,” he says, “if you’re a company that’s building The smartest thing ever, people will want to give you money.” He added: “It doesn’t take two years. “It requires a lot of computing, a lot of human creativity, and a lot of trial and error.” When asked if he thought artificial general intelligence would ever be achieved, he replied, “I don’t really know.”