Dr. Lolly Mancey
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And that's going to be a major challenge.
The other thing, and let's not get too far ahead of ourselves, but if we could produce enough energy cleanly to actually power quantum computing, quantum has the potential through physics to actually solve these problems that we've got with AI at the moment.
It has that computational power and that ability.
So that's also in the background of all of this.
I think we have to actually have more say.
I don't think we do feel we have any say.
I think you're right.
I mean, when we made Futurbo in the first series, I'm literally flying off to the Space Center in Cologne this weekend to look at what they're doing for the third series that's coming out.
When we did the first series and we said to people, how do you feel about AI?
It was a kind of, oh, I don't know.
When we made the second series, it was much more divided in terms of pro and against.
So what I think we're seeing now is a bit of a natural backlash, which is, I think, right.
You can see in the United States, the unions are mobilising.
So if someone is being told in their job that actually, you know, you have to use AI in your job, the unions will stand in to protect you.
That's because there's no regulation.
Our only role eventually as humans will be fact checkers to AI, but it's a very large possibility, especially in some organizations and industries.
But, you know, I mean, if we can use it to challenge ourselves, but if also we can decide when not to use it, right?
Certain things that have to be boundaried off, in my opinion, as sacrosanct.
Childhood is one of them.