Lloyd Blankfein
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Single digit thousands of people died.
Horrible.
But in the atomic age of Fukushima, if the wind had blown in a different direction, it could have been tens of millions of people.
So these are risks.
These are consequences.
People may be loathe.
One of the big risks are governmental and regulatory.
And they'd be right.
We may want to have to regulatorily slow some of these things up.
not because it's smarter than us and it's going to turn us into pets, but because we don't have the ability to test whether it's right or not.
And so how do you build reliance on things that fundamentally you can't test?
And then these things will test each other.
Well, what if they're coordinating?
The tests themselves are flawed.
You will think of more of this stuff than I do because you're a technologist.
I'm a user.
But I have, you know, again...
There's a right to be anxious of it, but...
You might as well be turning back the tides.
I'm going to waste no time in thinking about whether it's good or bad.