The View | Hong Kong can ensure artificial intelligence remains a force for good
- The steady rise of AI technology has left governments, industries and institutions scrambling to catch up and establish rules of the road
- As a knowledge-based economy, Hong Kong can lead the way in building a regulatory framework that limits the harmful impact of AI and maximises its benefits
Would you want to talk to a digital version of your loved one after they have died? The idea may sound like something out of the dystopian sci-fi series Black Mirror (and as it turns out, the idea did feature in a 2013 episode). But it’s not entirely science fiction.
Using artificial intelligence, the California-based company HereAfterAI lets people “talk” to loved ones who have passed on, though it’s unclear how realistic the experience is at the moment. But as this kind of technology improves, one can expect a range of views about how society should address it.
AI tools have been quietly proliferating in most sectors. But ChatGPT has driven home just how swift that progress has been. Indeed, incremental advancements tend to go unnoticed until a truly disruptive technology emerges.