Reasons to be Cheerful with Ed Miliband & Geoff Lloyd
News:Politics
Hello! This week we’re talking about ChatGPT, the artificial intelligence language model that’s taken the world by storm. But is the hype justified? And what can it do beyond writing poems about your favourite podcast? We speak to Rory Cellan-Jones, whose dog is also an internet sensation, about what ChatGPT is and whether it’s been trained on a pro-Ed dataset, to Dr Kate Devlin about what it means for education and whether we can trust AI, and finally to Andrew Strait about some of the ethical concerns surrounding ChatGPT. Can AI really make society better and fairer?
Plus: Where is Ed off to next on his culinary journey?
Guests
Rory Cellan-Jones, Former Technology Correspondent, BBC (@ruskin147 and check out the hashtag #SophiefromRomania to keep up to date with the latest doggie developments)
Dr Kate Devlin, Reader in Artificial Intelligence and Society, Department of Digital Humanities at King’s College London (@drkatedevlin & @kingsdh)
Andrew Strait, Associate Director, Ada Lovelace Institute (@agstrait & @AdaLovelaceInst)
More info
Try out ChatGPT for yourself
Subscribe to Rory’s Substack on health and technology
Department of Digital Humanities, King’s College London
Visit the Ada Lovelace Institute’s Website
UKRI Trustworthy Autonomous Systems
Stephen Hawking warns artificial intelligence could end mankind by Rory Cellan-Jones
OpenAI underpaid 200 Kenyans to perfect ChatGPT then sacked them
Human-like programs abuse our empathy by Professor Emily Bender
ChatGPT used by mental health tech app in AI experiment
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Reasons Revisited: Beyond GDP
It's fun to stay at the YHA: who gets to access the outdoors?
Loss, love and a calling to nature: Ben Goldsmith
The hidden story of Chinese food: Fuchsia Dunlop
How to fix the broken food system: Henry Dimbleby
What about men?: Caitlin Moran
How to end our very British culture war: Sunder Katwala
Throwing shade: why you’ll never take trees for granted again
Fields of Dreams: how music festivals moved from the margins to the mainstream
Never stopped us dreaming: the rise of women’s football
Driven to distraction: can we resist the attention economy?
Freewheeling: how to embrace the bicycle boom
Will there be a Hollywood ending? why the writers are on strike
The People's Plan for Nature: how re-imagining our democracy could save nature
Live at the RSC Part 2: the return of the Doctor
Live at the RSC Part 1: the fight for better climate education in our schools
Business as (un)usual: can people and planet really come before profit?
Reasons to be Letchworth: what can we learn from the garden city movement?
But what can I do?: a conversation with Alastair Campbell
Thank you, next: breaking up with the job for life
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Tiny Desk Concerts - Video
The Infinite Monkey Cage
The Audio Long Read
No Such Thing As A Fish
BBC Earth Podcast