ChatGPT sparks AI investment bonanza – DW (English)

The artificial intelligence (AI) gold rush is truly underway. Afterthe release last November of ChatGPT a game-changing content-generating platform byresearch and development company OpenAI, several other tech giants, including Google and Alibaba have raced to release their own versions.

Investors from Shanghai to Silicon Valley are now pouring tens ofbillions of dollars into startups specializing in so-called generative AIin what some analysts think could become a new dot-com bubble.

The speed at which algorithms rather than humans have been utilized to create high-quality text, software code, music, video and images has sparked concerns thatmillions of jobs globally could be replaced and the technology may even start controlling humans.

But even Tesla boss Elon Musk, who has repeatedlywarned of the dangers of AI, has announced plans to launch a rival to ChatGPT.

Businesses and organizations have quickly discoveredways to easily integrate generative AI into functions like customerservices, marketing, and software development. Analysts say the enthusiasmof early adopters will likely have a massive snowball effect.

"The next two to three years will define so much about generative AI,"David Foster, cofounder of Applied Data Science Partners, a London-based AI and data consultancy, told DW. "We will talk about it in the same way as the internet itself howit changes everything that we do as a human species."

Foster noted how generative AI is being integrated into tools companiesalready have, like Microsoft Office, so they don't need to makehuge upfront investmentsto get a significant benefit from the technology.

ChatGPT and the others are still far from perfect, however. They mostly assistin the creative process with prompts from humansbut arenot yet worker substitutes. But last month, an even more intelligent upgrade, ChatGPT-4was rushed out, and version 5 is rumored for release by the end of the year.

Another advancement, AutoGPT, was launched at the end of last month, which can further automatetasks that ChatGPT needs human input for.

Research last month by Deutsche Bankshowed thattotal global corporate investment into AI has grown 150% since 2019 to nearly $180 billion (164 billion), and nearly 30-fold since 2013. The number of public AI projects rose to nearly 350,000 by end of last year, with more than 140,000 patents filed for AI technology alone in 2021.

Startups don't need to reinvent what's already been created. Instead, they can focus on adapting the current generative AI platforms for specialistuses, including cures for cancers, smart finance and gaming.

"You have a new market emerging, a bit like when the [smartphone]app stores opened up. Small startups will make creative use of the technology, even thoughthey didn't create it themselves,"author and AI researcher Thomas Ramge told DW.

While the US has until now led the world in AI development, China has recently closed the gap along with India.China is nowresponsible for 18% of all high-impact AI projects, compared to 14% for the US, according to Deutsche Bank.

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The East-West race for economic dominance, however, is overshadowed by the threat of how an authoritarian government, like Beijing,could further use AI to control not only its population but the rest of the world. Somethink this fear is overblown, however,as China's leadershave their own anxieties overthepower of algorithms.

"The Chinese government has been regulating AI because they seevery clearlythat it could cause them to lose control,"AI expert and MIT professorMax Tegmark told DW. "So they're limiting the freedom of companies to just experiment wildly with poorly understood stuff."

Tegmark is more concerned about the race by Western tech giants to push the technology towardthe outer edges of acceptability and beyond. He noted that the US is hesitant to introduce AI regulations, due to lobbying by the tech sector. Repeated warnings about the need to avoid a so-called AI arms race havefallen on deaf ears.

"Sadly, that's exactly what we have right now," said Tegmark, "They [corporate leaders]understand the risks, they want to do the right thing, but they can't stop. No company can pause alone because they're just going to have their lunch eaten by the competition and get killed by their shareholders."

Two years of work by the European Uniononthe Artificial Intelligence Act, which was due to be enacted this year, was upended by the launch of ChatGPT, which sent policymakers back to the drawing board.

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Europe, meanwhile, is struggling to matchthe hunger of its US and Asian tech counterparts in the generative AI spacedue to investors beingrisk-averse.

"Same old story. Europe is lagging behind," Ramge said. "Itdid not foresee this trend and is once again claiming it will be able to catch up."

Ramgehighlighted two potential stars aGerman plan to create a European AI infrastructure known as LEAM,and the Heidelberg-based startup Aleph Alpha, despite the latter raising just $31.1 millionto date, versus OpenAI's $11 billion.

"What Europe is not able to do is to transfer the knowledge out of the universities into rapidly growing startups unicorns that in the end are able to bring the new technology to the world,"he told DW.

Edited by: Uwe Hessler

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ChatGPT sparks AI investment bonanza - DW (English)

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