In recent months, artificial intelligence has gained prominence in the news, influenced people and put a flea behind the ears of even experts on the subject – let alone us, mere mortals.
ADVERTISING
O ChatGPT It quickly became a fever and scared those who had no idea about AI's superhuman creation and production capacity. Since then, discussions about privacy, security and ethical conflicts on the platform have intensified.
The European Union, for example, is already discussing regulatory measures for AIs and Italy was the first country to bar the ChatGPT. China, in turn, demands that the ChatGPT remove content that involves violence, pornography or that disrupts the country's social and economic order.
What do the experts say?
For lawyer specializing in General Data Protection Law and doctor in Public Law, João Henrique Orssato, regulation has to happen. However, the big question around this is how this movement will be carried out and what the degree of State interference should be in the performance of artificial intelligence.
ADVERTISING
“I think the question of whether it should be regulated or not has already been overcome. Yes it should. Nowadays everything is regulated. I think the factor is more in the dosage of how much this should be regulated. What is the degree of interference that the State should have. The State interferes in all aspects of our lives. I think it's more a question of how much it should regulate than whether it should be regulated, especially because you have specific impacts on people's lives”.
Regarding the regulatory level that should be imposed on AIs, the lawyer explains: what is consumed directly by human beings and what has the greatest impact on people's lives must be in focus and be regulated.
In a playful way, he explains: paper, for example, is less regulated than food. Why? Food has a direct impact on human life. Did you understand?
ADVERTISING
Therefore, depending on the interference of a tool such as ChatGPT In people's lives, the level of regulation will be greater, and it must vary.
“Whatever interacts directly with the human being, what has a response that will have a direct impact on the human being, perhaps it is the case that you have more intense regulation”, emphasizes Orssato.
@curtonews For the lawyer specializing in General Data Protection Law, João Henrique Orssato, the regulation of artificial intelligence has to happen. However, the big question around this is how this movement will be carried out and what the degree of State interference should be.
♬ original sound – Curto News
Who is benefiting from artificial intelligence
At the other end of the discussion, but no less important, there are those who are already using artificial intelligence tools in their daily professional lives. This is the case of CBRDoc, a startup that calls itself the “document mall”.
ADVERTISING
The company is responsible for speeding up obtaining documents for other institutions. They are using the API do ChatGPT to “talk” to the documents. This way, manuscripts of dozens or hundreds of pages can be simplified into searches with just a few taps.
“Then our technology analyzes the document and brings the result to the screen. In a matter of seconds, the person can filter the result of a certificate, for example. The tool is bringing fantastic results for us on how to interpret, how to extract more information more intelligently from these documents”, says administrator Rafael Galante, Co-CEO of CBRdoc.
This is the incredible side of technology at the service of humans: those bureaucracies typical of validating documents can be resolved with the use of artificial intelligence.
ADVERTISING
“For example, the property registration is fifteen, twenty pages long. It has information on the value of the property, who the owners are, buyer and seller, area, location... how can we provide a summary for those who are interpreting the document? So today companies have this tool, even with several certificates we can 'spreadsheet' this by giving some basic commands”, explains the economist and also Co-CEO of the company, Allan Mendonça.
For good and for bad
Artificial intelligence has been used beyond everyday business life. O Newsverse published a report last month showing that more and more users have been searching for the ChatGPT to resolve emotional dilemmas. Used as a therapist even.
And just as a “flesh and blood” psychologist warns that this can be dangerous, in the legal and business diagram, the situation is similar: there are serious implications for the future of humanity and professions.
Júnior Bornelli is a Law graduate and founder of StartSe, a business school that connects companies to the new economy. According to him, naturally many professions could disappear with the advancement of technology. Regardless of artificial intelligence.
“If you don't know how to use artificial intelligence from now on, it will be like you don't know how to use the office suite. As if I didn't know how to use the internet. Anyone who knows how to use this to their advantage will become more effective, more productive, will do more with less, discover new opportunities”, he explains.
Bornelli, like other technology scholars, admits that AI could make many people obsolete. For repetitive tasks, the robot can be unbeatable. About artificial intelligence, the innovation enthusiast says: “he doesn't get tired, he doesn't get hurt, he doesn't have vacations, he doesn't stop. He doesn't have a child, he doesn't go home and he doesn't have a bill to pay. So the robot is much better able to carry out certain activities than us.”
Whether AI will surpass humans only time will tell, but, in principle, it is necessary to look at the popularization of technology in a peaceful way. Unanimously, all those interviewed believe that there is a human capacity that will never be surpassed by any machine: creativity.
@curtonews Will the professions we know today disappear with the advancement of technology and artificial intelligence? Júnior Bornelli, founder of StartSe, says yes.
♬ original sound Curto News
See also: