Pope Francis has thrown his support behind calls for AI to be regulated.
The pontiff used his annual message for the World Day of Peace to say an international treaty was needed to ensure artificial intelligence is developed safely and used ethically.
He warned the tech may lack human values like compassion and morality, and blur the lines between what is real and fake.
The Pope should know, given he has been the subject of some of 2023’s most infamous AI-generated images.
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In March, social media went into a state of collective awe when he appeared to have been pictured rocking a stylish puffer jacket.
The surreal image was indeed too good to be true, as it had been made using the AI tool Midjourney.
Like how ChatGPT generates text content, it allows users to ask for images using a simple prompt.
The fake picture originated on Reddit and was shared tens of millions of times across social media, fooling people including celebrities, becoming one of the first major instances of large-scale, AI-driven misinformation.
This week, UK charity Full Fact highlighted another false image of Francis, which appeared to show him addressing enormous crowds in Lisbon earlier this year.
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Image: An AI-generated image of the Pope addressing crowds in Lisbon, Portugal. Pic: Full Fact
Pope shares biggest AI fears
Cardinal Michael Czerny, of the Vatican’s development office, shared the Pope’s fears in a written message.
“The biggest risk is to dialogue,” he said.
“Because dialogue can’t take place without truth and truth can’t take place without responsibility.”
The Pope said the priority for regulation should be guarding against disinformation, discrimination, and distortion, promoting peace, and guaranteeing human rights.
Read more:How chaos unfolded at maker of ChatGPTThe first year of the chatbot that changed the world
His intervention comes days after the EU reached a deal on how to regulate AI, covering generative tools like Midjourney and ChatGPT, though it won’t take effect until 2025 at the earliest.
US President Joe Biden unveiled the White House’s own proposals in October, which included potentially mandating that AI-generated content be watermarked.
In the UK, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has been more cautious, arguing AI legislation risks stifling innovation.
Source : Sky News