N 1983, the Soviet Union's Oko early-warning system issued a critical alert, signaling an imminent nuclear strike from the US. The system, based on satellite data and algorithmic analysis, had malfunctioned, misinterpreting sunlight reflections on high-altitude clouds as missile launches. The officer on duty, Stanislav Petrov, faced a critical dilemma: to trust the seemingly precise output or rely on human intuition shaped by broader context and uncertainty. He chose the latter, averting a nuclear catastrophe.
This moment serves as a haunting precursor to the challenges we now face with AI. It highlights the philosophical question of epistemic reliability: How do we ensure that machine-generated knowledge aligns with truth in high-stakes scenarios?
The electronics and IT ministry recently organized a consultation to establish the India AI Safety Institute, reflecting global efforts to address the multifaceted challenges posed by advanced AI technologies. The US, UK, European Union, Japan, Singapore, South Korea, Canada, France, Kenya and Australia have already established institutes to evaluate AI systems, conduct adversarial testing, and develop methodologies for mitigating risks such as bias, manipulation and unintended behavior. However, they should also look at the ethical questions.
An AI safety institute should look at epistemological and ethical dimensions of decision-making. What does it mean for an AI system to "understand" risk? How can it differentiate between signal and noise in contexts it has not been explicitly trained for? And how do we embed systems with the humility to defer when certainty is an illusion? These questions lie at the intersection of philosophy, ethics and systems design, defining the very essence of safe AI.
This story is from the December 19, 2024 edition of The New Indian Express.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the December 19, 2024 edition of The New Indian Express.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Engineering the Actor Within
Parvati Nair talks about her latest film Mr Rani, her career so far, and multiple projects on her plate.
It's a Bling Thing
From preppy fashion accessories to elevated essentials, designer Tiara Dhody's latest chic bijouterie works as a serotonin booster
The Sun and Stars of Inside Living
A home is a compelling personal statement of the owner's personality. How doing it up by zodiac sign can unleash the full potential of colours, shapes and textures
More than Just History
Though the writing begins with a little uncertainty, the author hits her stride quickly building on extensive research
The Black Book of 1975
Whoever said one should not let Whoever said one should not leted story has not read PK Sreenivasan's novel Midnight Knock.
How the Mesopotamians Imagined Earth
The Mesopotamian civilisation, which civilisation, arose around 3400 BC, was one of the earliest urban civilisations.
Her Cakes, Her Cakewalk
Mumbai's queen of confectionery completes two inspired decades of baking sweet somethings for movie stars and celebrity tycoons who get their sugar hit from her little empire.
The Power to Rise Above Loss
Children, some people say, \"We lead an ethical life. We do not betray or harm anyone.
Wild and High
Tucked away from the well-worn tourist paths of Madhya Pradesh's Kanha and Bandhavgarh lies Satpura's hidden gem the Denwa Backwater Escape.
Hands-on Learning for Under Graduates
Hoffman had won the Nobel prize in Medicine in 2011.