Yuval Noah Harari, the bestselling author of some of Silicon Valley’s most required reading, had serious chats with two of its most important figures.
Early last week, Harari had a convo/debate with Fei-Fei Li, AI pioneer and co-director of Stanford’s recently announced institute for ethical, human-centered AI.
- Harari predicted a parochial AI arms race and a widened geopolitical gulf between AI’s best (the U.S. and China) and the rest.
- Li said cross-disciplinary, global AI collaboration can stop that from happening, and added that she’s “envious” of philosophers who don’t need to build solutions.
On Friday: A tête-à-tête with Mark Zuckerberg, who spun a largely positive narrative about social media, internet platforms, and the algorithms behind them. Harari parried, saying they’re fragmenting society, funneling wealth into a small class of techno-elites, and eroding independent thinking.
It’s a sign of our times: The philosopher asks tough questions but isn’t in the driver’s seat. The AI pioneer frets over the status quo but resolves to build a better future. The executive, meanwhile, says today’s technological forces are for the greater good.
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