Why Elon Musk wants to build a robot maid for you
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Tech guru Elon Musk is known for many things, including his work as chief executive officer of both Tesla Motors and SpaceX, two vastly different companies that are known for their innovation with an eye to the future.
Now, Mr. Musk may be setting himself up for a new reputation 鈥 as the man behind squeaky clean floors and perfectly dusted shelves.
Musk鈥檚 artificial intelligence nonprofit, OpenAI, wrote in a blog post Tuesday that they are, among other things, "working to ... to perform basic housework."
OpenAI was founded in December, 2015, with the goal of creating open-source artificial intelligence to aid humanity. All patents and research generated by the group .
鈥淎rtificial intelligence is one of the great opportunities for ,鈥 OpenAI cofounder Reid Hoffman told The New York Times in December.
Since the nonprofit was created last December, there has been speculation about the projects it will pursue. On Monday, four of the group鈥檚 primary backers, including Elon Musk, signed a blog post stating OpenAI鈥檚 initial goals.
Among those goals was the modification of a general purpose robot for household chores. Also mentioned in the blog post were the creation of a robotic agent that could perform tasks when asked verbally by a human, and respond with clarifying questions if necessary, and a robot with the ability to solve a variety of games.
Already, many are familiar with Roomba, the room vacuuming robot. OpenAI鈥檚 robot, however, would be a more sophisticated modification of an unspecified existing robot for cleaning purposes.
"We believe that learning algorithms can eventually be made reliable enough,鈥 wrote OpenAI, 鈥渢o create a general-purpose robot."
Pedro Domingos, the author of "" and a professor at the University of Washington, tells 海角大神 in a phone interview that OpenAI鈥檚 quest for a household robot is not unique.聽
Many other companies are working on similar projects, he says, but despite longstanding concerns that blue-collar jobs would be the first to be replaced by technology, it is actually very difficult to engineer robots that can handle the multiple tasks required by housekeeping.
Dr. Domingos predicts that OpenAI (and other groups working to create a household robot) will approach the project in steps, connecting pre-existing technology at first, rather than producing a completed household robot right away.
鈥淭he things that are easy for us to do,鈥 says Domingos, 鈥渁re easy because evolution spent millions of years working on them. Things as simple as not bumping into objects on the floor are hard to engineer.鈥
Monday鈥檚 announcement may seem odd, given Elon Musk鈥檚 stated wariness of artificial intelligence.聽In 2014, Musk said in an interview that artificial intelligence is humans鈥 鈥済reatest existential threat.鈥
And among the authors of this week鈥檚 blog post, Musk is .
"I think AI will ...most likely lead to the end of the world,鈥 said Y Combinator president Sam Altman at a tech forum last year. 鈥淏ut in the meantime there will be great companies created with serious machine learning."
Yet, Domingos says that this is highly unlikely, as AI robots don鈥檛 have a will of their own and can accomplish only preprogrammed tasks. They can be infinitely smart, he says, and still be harmless.
鈥淭he real damage that artificial intelligence can cause occurs when robots do not understand commands. Many robots don鈥檛 have common sense,鈥 says Domingos, 鈥渁nd the cure for that is actually making them more intelligent.鈥
鈥淭he real problem is not that machines will become too smart,鈥 Domingos says. 鈥淭he real problem is that the stupid ones have already taken over the world.鈥
Regardless of concerns about the potential dangers of artificial intelligence, Domingos says he foresees household robots becoming essential to daily life.
鈥淗aving a household robot will become like having a car or a TV,鈥 says Domingos, 鈥淚 want one. Wouldn鈥檛 you?鈥