Issue link: https://maltatoday.uberflip.com/i/1499533
SYMBOL LAST CHANGE % HIGH LOW DOW JONES – US 33,561.80 -56.88 -0.17% 33,656.40 33,509.70 NASDAQ – US 12,179.50 +0.00 +0.00% 12,216.10 12,174.10 S&P 500 – US 4,119.17 -18.95 -0.46% 4,130.35 4,116.65 RUSSELL 2000 – US 1,749.68 -4.79 -0.27% 1,756.09 1,737.70 S&P TSX – CANADA 20,585.70 +0.58 +0.00% 20,599.00 20,455.50 IPC – MEXICO 55,452.70 +419.61 +0.76% 55,497.80 54,899.40 FTSE – UK 7,750.80 -13.29 -0.17% 7,778.98 7,750.37 CAC 40 – FRANCE 7,373.77 -23.40 -0.32% 7,416.32 7,373.20 DAX 40 – GERMANY 15,886.20 -69.32 -0.43% 15,980.80 15,884.00 FTSE MIB – ITALY 27,325.70 -57.80 -0.21% 27,476.40 27,324.70 MICEX – RUSSIA 2,524.31 -3.28 -0.13% 2,535.03 2,483.79 NIKKEI 225 – JAPAN 29,122.20 -120.64 -0.41% 29,195.20 29,070.10 SHANGHAI COMPOSITE – CHINA 3,319.15 -38.52 -1.15% 3,349.72 3,305.25 HANG SENG – HONG KONG 19,776.90 -90.64 -0.46% 19,880.00 19,696.60 NIFTY 50 – INDIA 18,249.10 -16.90 -0.09% 18,323.20 18,211.90 KOSPI – KOREA 2,496.51 -13.55 -0.54% 2,510.13 2,488.42 18.5.2023 7 MARKETS International Markets Global Indices Trading Date: 17 May 2023 ChatGPT boss warns US Congress on dangers of AI SAM Altman, the chief executive of ChatGPT de- veloper OpenAI, used his US Senate appearance on Tuesday to offer words of warning for the technolo- gy that he helped become mainstream. Altman, who co-founded OpenAI in 2015 with fi- nancial backing from Elon Musk, warned that if arti- ficial intelligence (AI) and machine learning tech- nology go wrong, "it can go quite wrong". "OpenAI was founded on the belief that artificial intelligence has the po- tential to improve nearly every aspect of our lives, but also that it creates serious risks," said Alt- man, however, he added, "we think that regulatory intervention by govern- ments will be critical to mitigate the risks of in- creasingly powerful mod- els". He proposed a regulato- ry body with the power to grant and provoke licenc- es to ensure compliance with safety standards. Generative AI tools such as ChatGPT and Ope- nAI's Dalle-E-2 software can create increasingly humanlike text, speech and visuals. Their sky- rocketing popularity has brought with it concerns over national security, copyright protection and misinformation. Democrat senator Rich- ard Blumenthal opened the Tuesday hearing with a computer-generated simulacrum of his voice, which a computer can convincingly imitate after mere hours of learning. "If you were listening from home, you might have thought that voice was mine and the words from me, but in fact, that voice was not mine," said Blumenthal. Artificial intelligence technologies "are more than just research ex- periments. They are no longer fantasies of science fiction, they are real and present," said Blumenthal. "What if I had asked it, and what if it had pro- vided, an endorsement of Ukraine surrendering or Vladimir Putin's leader- ship?" he asked Capitol Hill. Republican senator John Lawley voiced concerns to Congress over AI's impact on elections, jobs and na- tional security. Altman proposed a com- bination of licensing and testing requirements be- fore more powerful tools are released to the pub- lic, echoing concerns laid out in a letter cosigned by Musk, Apple co-found- er Steve Wozniak, top AI professors Stuart Russell, Yoshua Bengio and Gary Marcus, and founders of AI startups Stability AI, Character.ai, Unanimous AI and Attain.ai. AI 'godfather' Geoffrey Hinton, who resigned from Google in May, voiced similar concerns, warning that it was only a matter of time before AI became more intelligent than humans. Altman has scheduled a global tour this month, visiting national capitals and major cities across six continents to engage pol- icymakers and the public in discussions about AI. 'If this technology goes wrong, it can go quite wrong'

