![]() You- let's say you have 100 things to go through. ![]() You know, if I- if I- if you think about five to 10 years from now, you're gonna have a AI collaborator with you. So, for example, you could be a radiologist. Scott Pelley: Every product in every company. Sundar Pichai: This is going to impact every product across every company and so that's, that's why I think it's a very, very profound technology. And how do these complement what people do today. How do we assist people to build new skills? Learn to work alongside machines. So this is a profound change which has implications for skills. Because they're now being assisted by AI and by automation. Something like more than two-thirds will have their definitions change. But the biggest change will be the jobs that'll be changed. There are also new job categories that'll grow over time. James Manyika: Yes, there are some job occupations that'll start to decline over time. Scott Pelley: A lot of people can be replaced by this technology. Imagine that level of automation across the economy. But Bard can write a million before Hemingway could finish one. Could Hemingway write a better short story? Maybe. The AI revolution: Google's artificial intelligence developers on what's next in the fieldīut AI itself will pose its own problems.James Manyika: AI has the potential to change many ways in which we've thought about society, about what we're able to do, the problems we can solve. Zimbabwe born, Oxford educated, James Manyika holds a new position at Google - his job is to think about how AI and humanity will best co-exist. So, it's no surprise to me that the exhibited behavior sometimes looks like maybe there's somebody behind it. So, when they learn from that, they build patterns from that. We've reflected all that in books, in novels, in fiction. We have beings that have feelings, emotions, ideas, thoughts, perspectives. Because keep in mind, they've learned from us. ![]() They can exhibit behaviors that look like that. That's not what's happening? These machines are not sentient. Scott Pelley: Bard, to my eye, appears to be thinking. We asked Bard why it helps people and it replied – quote – "because it makes me happy." It runs on 40% solar power and collects more water than it uses - high-tech that Pichai couldn't have imagined growing up in India with no telephone at home.īut it doesn't feel like that. Our conversations with 50-year-old Sundar Pichai started at Google's new campus in Mountain View, California. Scott Pelley with Google CEO Sundar Pichai The number of people, you know, who have started worrying about the implications, and hence the conversations are starting in a serious way as well. On the other hand, compared to any other technology, I've seen more people worried about it earlier in its life cycle. On one hand I feel, no, because you know, the pace at which we can think and adapt as societal institutions, compared to the pace at which the technology's evolving, there seems to be a mismatch. Sundar Pichai: You know, there are two ways I think about it. Scott Pelley: Do you think society is prepared for what's coming? The revolution, he says, is coming faster than you know. CEO Sundar Pichai told us AI will be as good or as evil as human nature allows. We explored what's coming next at Google, a leader in this new world. The technology, known as a chatbot, is only one of the recent breakthroughs in artificial intelligence - machines that can teach themselves superhuman skills. Which is to say, with creativity, truth, error and lies. In 2023, we learned that a machine taught itself how to speak to humans like a peer. We may look on our time as the moment civilization was transformed as it was by fire, agriculture and electricity. Exploring the human-like side of artificial intelligence at Google | 60 Minutes 27:21
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