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World in the age of AI

How far are we from inventing the artificial general intelligence? Can we cross out the 'red lines' for the development of AI? How will AI change the job market?

Artificial intelligence: directions of development, red lines, impact on humanity

The advancement in generative AI models, the most popular of which being ChatGPT, fuels the expectations on the invention of AGI with all qualities of the human mind, capable of acting autonomously. However, not everyone is comfortable with the fact that their works are being used for AI training, and they express it in subsequent lawsuits for copyright infringement. Lawmakers are also taking steps to ensure that the triumphant march of artificial intelligence does not trample humans along the way. While some fear AI will take their jobs, others question whether the huge costs of maintaining computing centres will outweigh the potential profits. We ask experts how the new world in the age of AI, born right before our eyes, could look like.

Dr Joanna Jaworek-Korjakowska, associate professor at the AGH University
Director of the Center of Excellence in Artificial Intelligence and deputy head of the Department of Automatics and Robotics  at the AGH University of Krakow. Her main interest focus on AI, particularly on deep learning, anomaly detection, clustering, and interpretability and explainability of solutions. Coordinator of the ARTIQ – AI Centre project funded by the Polish National Science Centre and the National Centre for Research and Development, as well as an expert of the Confederation of Laboratories for Artificial Intelligence Research in Europe (CLAIRE).

Dr Paweł Lula, associate professor at the Krakow University of Economics
Employee in the Computational Systems Department at the Krakow University of Economics. His research interest include explorative data analysis methods, analysis of text documents, AI methods, and decision-support methods and tools. Author of around 200 academic and research publications.

Dr Michał Araszkiewicz
Assistant professor in the Department of Legal Theory, Faculty of Law and Administration at the Jagiellonian University. Legal counsel (acrlegal.pl). Specialist in legal issues of artificial intelligence, intellectual property, data protection and information, whereas in his academic work in computational modelling of legal reasoning. Member of the Executive Committee International Association for Artificial Intelligence and Law (iaail.org) and of the board of JURIX  The Foundation for Legal Knowledge Based Systems.

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