Listen to the audio version of the article
Generative artificial intelligence, the one that understands what we say and acts accordingly by providing us with information, drawings, plans, suggestions and anything else we may need, is becoming more and more effective and good at completing the tasks we ask of it.
Future versions of ChatGPT, Gemini, Meta AI and the like will have iron memories, will be able to interpret videos and photos on the fly and will integrate with the web so well that they will replace search engines in many of their applications.
They will become so skilled at interpreting the world around us that within five years each of us will have one on us, equipped with a video camera, a speaker to answer us, capable of interpreting our vocal requests and connected to our entire digital world in the cloud to be able to organize our appointments, remind us of bills that are due, respond to unimportant emails or organize them for the next work day.
Or at least this is the idea of Marco Preuss, European director of Kaspersky’s Great (Global research team), who sees a very rapid and perhaps too polarized development of AI.
“AI development,” says Preuss, “is biased in favor of the big giants. It should be as democratic a technology as possible, but the necessary investments and the difficulty in finding the necessary hardware are making it available only to a ‘few’.”