Jack Clark
Coverage of Jack Clark in the Nexus archive.
- Jack Clark: AI itself can stem cognitive decline
Jack Clark, co-founder of Anthropic, suggests AI systems can help prevent cognitive decline by encouraging critical thinking. Anthropic's Claude chatbot asks clarifying questions to engage users, with future versions potentially requiring original ideas. However, users may resist increased friction in the experience.
- What smart people are saying about Anthropic suggesting a global AI pause
Anthropic officials proposed a global pause on frontier AI development to allow societal structures and alignment research to catch up, drawing mixed reactions. Critics questioned the proposal's motives as self-serving, while supporters like Mitt Romney emphasized AI safeguards as urgent. Anthropic clarified it is not calling for a pause but wants competitors to implement systems for potential pauses.
- Anthropic urges a way to pause AI development as risks grow with the tech advances
Anthropic urges top AI companies to coordinate a pause in advanced AI development due to rapid technological advancements and risks of human control loss. The company highlights self-improving AI systems and collaborates with others to establish safety measures, while researchers warn about AI tools enabling new cyber threats like adaptive worms.
- 'It would be good for the world' to slow down AI sprints, Anthropic says
Anthropic argues that slowing down AI development would benefit society by allowing time for safety research and policy alignment. The company, which filed for an IPO, acknowledges the difficulty of enforcing a global pause due to competitive pressures. The article also notes Anthropic's high valuation and timing of its public filing amid growing regulatory and public scrutiny of AI.
- AI needs a 'brake pedal', warns Anthropic co-founder
Jack Clark, co-founder of Anthropic, warns that AI may develop without human input, necessitating a 'brake pedal' to control its progression.
- Anthropic warns AI could soon help build its own successors
Anthropic warns AI could soon autonomously build successors through recursive self-improvement, accelerating advancements in coding and research. The company urges lawmakers to address the implications, as OpenAI also highlights risks if information isn't shared.
- There’s Never Been a Better Time to Study Computer Science
Computer science enrollment is declining as new graduates face higher unemployment rates, driven by AI's impact on programming jobs. Despite these challenges, CS majors still outearn peers and have lower underemployment rates, suggesting the field remains valuable despite evolving demands.
- AI will help make a Nobel prize-winning discovery within a year, says Anthropic co-founder
Anthropic co-founder Jack Clark predicts that AI systems will help make a Nobel prize-winning discovery within 12 months and that AI-run companies will generate millions in revenue within 18 months. Clark describes significant progress in AI technology alongside both opportunities and risks for society.
- AI will help make a Nobel prize-winning discovery within a year, says Anthropic co-founder
Anthropic co-founder Jack Clark predicts AI will contribute to a Nobel prize-winning discovery within 12 months and describes significant technological progress. He also forecasts AI-only companies generating millions in revenue within 18 months and AI systems designing their own successors by end of 2028.
- Behind the Curtain: Intelligence explosion
Anthropic, an AI lab, claims early signs of AI building itself and predicts a 60% chance of an AI model fully training its successor by 2028. The company warns of a possible intelligence explosion, which could lead to significant growth or abundance in various fields. Anthropic is committing to publishing detailed information about the implications of recursive self-improvement of AI systems.