LeCun has previously stated that AI's capabilities are currently "limited" and that it is not even as smart as cats or dogs. He noted that while AI can pass a lawyer's bar exam due to its language training, it cannot perform simple physical tasks like unloading a dishwasher. He also dismissed fears about AI taking over humanity as "preposterously ridiculous" and overstated.
Key takeaways:
- Meta's chief AI scientist Yann LeCun is sceptical that AI will reach human-level intelligence anytime soon, predicting it will achieve "dog-level" or "cat-level" intelligence first.
- LeCun countered claims made by Nvidia's CEO Jensen Huang, who recently said that artificial general intelligence will likely be achieved in the next five years.
- LeCun believes that AI is being trained on language models and text that are not sufficient to create advanced AI, and that most of human knowledge is not captured by AI.
- LeCun has also dismissed fears that AI could take over humanity, calling such predictions "preposterously ridiculous" and overstated.