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微软成立超级智能研究团队,聚焦“人文主义”AI
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微软近日宣布成立MAI超级智能团队,由AI部门负责人Mustafa Suleyman领导,旨在研究超级智能及其他高级人工智能形式。该团队将投入重金,专注于解决实际问题,并确保AI技术服务于人类。此举正值科技巨头竞相招揽顶尖AI人才之际,微软此举被视为在AI领域的重要布局。团队将秉持“人文主义”理念,开发能够辅助人类在教育、医疗、能源等领域解决具体问题的AI,而非追求通用性无限的AI,以降低潜在风险,并力求在数年内实现医疗诊断等领域的专家级AI。

🌟 **专注“人文主义”超级智能:** 微软新成立的MAI超级智能团队,由Mustafa Suleyman领导,将致力于研究和开发服务于人类需求的人工智能。其核心理念是构建“人文主义超级智能”,确保AI技术旨在服务人类利益,解决具体问题,而非追求无限通用能力。

💰 **巨资投入与人才争夺:** 微软计划为该团队投入大量资金,并积极招募顶尖AI研究人才,包括内部调配和外部引进。此举也反映了当前科技行业在AI领域激烈的人才竞争态势,旨在确保在AI前沿研究中占据优势地位。

💡 **实际应用与风险控制:** 该团队的目标是开发能够解决实际、具体问题的AI技术,例如在医疗诊断、药物研发、能源效率提升等方面。通过专注于特定领域和“人文主义”原则,微软旨在避免失控的风险,确保AI的开发是可控且有益于社会的。

🏥 **医疗领域的前瞻布局:** 微软尤其看好AI在医疗健康领域的应用,预计在未来两到三年内将出现能够达到专家水平的AI诊断技术。这种AI能够处理复杂的医学问题,早期发现可预防性疾病,并在临床环境中提供高效的规划和预测。

Microsoft is forming a new team to research superintelligence and other advanced forms of artificial intelligence.

Mustafa Suleyman, who leads Microsoft’s AI division overseeing Bing and Copilot, announced the creation of the MAI Superintelligence Team in a blog post. He said he will head the group and that Microsoft plans to put “a lot of money” behind the effort.

“We are doing this to solve real, concrete problems and do it in such a way that it remains grounded and controllable,” Suleyman wrote. “We are not building an ill-defined and ethereal superintelligence; we are building a practical technology explicitly designed only to serve humanity.”

Building a ‘humanist’ approach to superintelligence

The move comes as big tech companies race to attract top AI researchers. Meta, Facebook’s parent company, recently created its own Meta Superintelligence Labs and spent billions recruiting experts, even offering signing bonuses as high as $100 million. Suleyman didn’t comment on whether Microsoft plans to match such offers but said the new team will include both internal talent and new hires, with Karen Simonyan as chief scientist.

Before joining Microsoft, Suleyman co-founded DeepMind, which Google bought in 2014. He later led the AI startup Inflection, which Microsoft acquired last year along with several of its employees.

The hiring push reflects a broader trend. Since OpenAI released ChatGPT in 2022, companies have raced to bring generative AI into their products. Microsoft uses OpenAI’s models in Bing and Copilot, while OpenAI relies on Microsoft’s Azure cloud to power its tools. Microsoft also holds a $135 billion stake in OpenAI after a recent restructuring.

Reducing reliance on OpenAI

Despite the partnership, Microsoft has been working to diversify its AI sources as it lays the groundwork for future superintelligence research. Following the Inflection acquisition, the company began experimenting with models from Google and Anthropic, another AI startup founded by former OpenAI executives.

The new Microsoft AI research group will aim to build useful AI companions that assist people in education and other areas. Suleyman said the team also plans to focus on projects in medicine and renewable energy.

A different path from rivals

Unlike some peers, Suleyman said Microsoft isn’t trying to build an “infinitely capable generalist” AI. He doubts such systems could be kept under control and instead wants to develop what he calls “humanist superintelligence” – AI that serves human needs and delivers real-world benefits.

“Humanism requires us to always ask the question: does this technology serve human interests?” he said.

While the risks of AI are widely debated – from bias to existential threats – Suleyman said his team’s goal is to create specialist systems that achieve “superhuman performance” without posing major risks. He cited examples like AI that could improve battery storage or design new molecules, similar to DeepMind’s AlphaFold project that predicts protein structures.

Medical superintelligence on the horizon

Suleyman said Microsoft is especially focused on healthcare, predicting that AI capable of expert-level diagnosis could emerge in the next two or three years.

He described it as technology that can reason through complex medical problems and detect preventable diseases much earlier. “We’ll have expert-level performance at the full range of diagnostics, alongside highly capable planning and prediction in operational clinical settings,” he wrote.

As investors question whether massive AI spending will translate into profits, Suleyman emphasised that Microsoft is setting clear limits. “We are not building a superintelligence at any cost, with no limits,” he said.

(Photo by Praswin Prakashan)

See also: Microsoft gives free Copilot AI services to US government workers

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The post Microsoft’s next big AI bet: building a ‘humanist superintelligence’ appeared first on AI News.

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微软 人工智能 超级智能 AI研究 人文主义AI Microsoft Artificial Intelligence Superintelligence AI Research Humanist AI
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