ai datacenter
'Time Is Running Out': New Open Letter Calls for Ban on Superintelligent AI Development
'Time Is Running Out': New Open Letter Calls for Ban on Superintelligent AI Development The home page of the ChatGPT application displayed on a smartphone screen. The home page of the ChatGPT application displayed on a smartphone screen. An open letter calling for the prohibition of the development of superintelligent AI was announced on Wednesday, with the signatures of more than 700 celebrities, AI scientists, faith leaders, and policymakers. Among the signatories are five Nobel laureates; two so-called "Godfathers of AI;" Steve Wozniak, a co-founder of Apple; Steve Bannon, a close ally of President Trump; Paolo Benanti, an adviser to the Pope; and even Harry and Meghan, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex. "We call for a prohibition on the development of superintelligence, not lifted before there is The letter was coordinated and published by the Future of Life Institute, a nonprofit that in 2023 published a different open letter calling for a six-month pause on the development of powerful AI systems. Although widely-circulated, that letter did not achieve its goal. Organizers said they decided to mount a new campaign, with a more specific focus on superintelligence, because they believe the technology--which they define as a system that can surpass human performance on all useful tasks--could arrive in as little as one to two years. "Time is running out," says Anthony Aguirre, the FLI's executive director, in an interview with TIME. The only thing likely to stop AI companies barreling toward superintelligence, he says, "is for there to be widespread realization among society at all its levels that this is not actually what we want." Polling released alongside the letter showed that 64% of Americans believe that superintelligence "shouldn't be developed until it's provably safe and controllable," and only 5% believe it should be developed as quickly as possible. "It's a small number of very wealthy companies that are building these, and a very, very large number of people who would rather take a different path," says Aguirre. Actors Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Stephen Fry, rapper will.i.am, Susan Rice, the national security advisor in Barack Obama's Administration, signed. So did one serving member of staff at OpenAI--an organization described by its CEO, Sam Altman, as a "superintelligence research company"--Leo Gao, a member of technical staff at the company. Aguirre expects more people to sign as the campaign unfolds. "The beliefs are already there," he says. "What we don't have is people feeling free to state their beliefs out loud." "The future of AI should serve humanity, not replace it," said Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex, in a message accompanying his signature. "I believe the true test of progress will be not how fast we move, but how wisely we steer.
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Fears over higher rates as Georgia moves to provide more electricity for AI datacenters
State's Republican-led public service commission to decide on power expansion and prices, as Democrats vie for voice Georgia is facing the largest demand for electricity in its history, driven by nation-leading datacenter construction. The Georgia Power company has made an unprecedented bid to the agency that oversees the utility for about 10 additional gigawatts of energy in the coming years - enough to power 8.3m homes, at an estimated cost of nearly $16bn, according to the Southern Environmental Law Center . But those huge numbers are not primarily for homes or local businesses in Georgia . Instead about 80% of the company's ask is driven by datacenters, primarily for artificial intelligence, according to Tom Krause, spokesperson for the state's public service commission, or PSC. It is the largest increase ever considered by the commission in a multiyear plan and comes as the Atlanta metro area led the nation in datacenter construction last year - a phenomenon playing out across the US and increasingly sparking protests and pushback.
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- Government > Regional Government > North America Government > United States Government (0.71)
Reward scheme for using less power at peak times could help lower US bills
With AI datacenters soaring power bills for households, a policy called'demand flexibility' could help ease grid strain A cheap, bipartisan tool could help the US meet increasing energy demand from AI datacenters while also easing soaring power bills for households, preventing deadly blackouts and helping the climate. The policy solution, called "demand flexibility", can be quickly deployed across the US. Demand flexibility essentially means rewarding customers for using less power during times of high demand, reducing strain on the grid or in some cases, selling energy they have captured by solar panels on their homes. Peak power demand is expected to grow by 20% over the next decade - driven by the dramatic rise of AI datacenters, onshoring of manufacturing, increasing use of EVs and growing need for air conditioning amid hotter summers. Increasing energy demand is putting states such as California and Texas at higher risk of life-threatening blackouts in extreme weather.
- North America > United States > California (0.26)
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Exclusive: Every AI Datacenter Is Vulnerable to Chinese Espionage, Report Says
The unredacted report was circulated inside the Trump White House in recent weeks, according to its authors. TIME viewed a redacted version ahead of its public release. The White House did not respond to a request for comment. Today's top AI datacenters are vulnerable to both asymmetrical sabotage--where relatively cheap attacks could disable them for months--and exfiltration attacks, in which closely guarded AI models could be stolen or surveilled, the report's authors warn. "You could end up with dozens of datacenter sites that are essentially stranded assets that can't be retrofitted for the level of security that's required," says Edouard Harris, one of the authors of the report.
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- Asia > China (0.40)