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Reflecting on our time at Blue Earth Summit

Blue Earth Summit is over, the dust has settled, and we’re reflecting on an incredible time at the Conference for a second time. This year we were an ecosystem partner, and we ran four great sessions across three days with over 80 participants! 

We ran two 90 minute interactive Catalyst Conversation sessions with the incredible Ben Keene and Tom Greenwood titled ‘Can businesses really use AI to accelerate positive impact?’.

Specifically we discussed questions like:

❓ How has technology changed your life?

🫠 How do you feel about AI technology?

🧐 Is AI technology ethically neutral?

🫣 Is it the responsibility of individuals to deploy the technology for good outcomes, or do those who created it bear responsibility?

🚀 If we assume AI isn’t going anywhere anytime soon, how can we leverage it for positive impact?

What were the takeaways?

Ben took us through a thought provoking process, asking us to think about how technology has changed our lives, asked our initial thoughts and feelings on AI technology and then gave us a number of examples where AI technology is being deployed for positive outcomes 

Ben asked to think about the concept that “AI is happening, machines will outsmart us, bad things will happen [but the potential for good is huge]…”. He acknowledged that this feels scary and overwhelming, but situated in the current contexts (where we need a hugely transformative scale for a just green transition), argued that the power of AI to process big data quickly and help humans transform industries is huge. 

Ben talked through the huge downsides to AI (sources linked below)

He also pointed to a number of examples of technology being used to do incredible things (sources linked below)

After letting the audience discuss for a while, Tom took the stage and made us take a step back!

AI technology has become an umbrella term that under which technology tends to fall into the following two broad categories:

Tom pointed out that machine learning has been around for much longer than generalised AI, which has really ramped up since the introduction of the most recent form of ChatGPT in late 2022. Much of the controversy surrounding AI mentioned in the bullet points above are more relevant to generalised AI- so Tom asked: Are we really anti or pro AI? Or are we anti or pro differing types of technology categorised as AI – which are really quite different. 

We should expect these technologies (if they keep developing at the current rate) to eventually become Artificial General Intelligence (AGI), which is technology that is roughly equally intelligent as humans across all aspects, and eventually Artificial Super Intelligence (ASI), which is technology more intelligent than the most intelligent humans on all intellectual tasks. 

Tom has created 7 principles for responsible AI usage that are well worth reading for full details. Briefly, these are:

  1. Mindfulness – Ask if it actually makes sense to use AI for this? Are there other, more appropriate tools to use in this situation or is AI genuinely the most appropriate tool for the task, taking into account the social and environmental context around AI usage.
  2. Human Oversight – Are you making sure that the output from AI usage is being checked properly by humans to make sure it is reliable, safe, and effective. AI hallucination is a real issue that has had real world consequences
  3. Screening for Bias – Are you checking the output from AI tools for bias? These models have bias built in due to how they are trained, and without due care, AI tools can exacerbate existing conscious and unconscious biases.
  4. Privacy – Are you checking whose data we’re using? This can be either for AI input ( have we asked the relevant person if we can use their data) or AI output (where has this data been collected from, and did they consent?). 
  5. Transparency of Authorship – Is it clear where this information came from? If there is content that is produced by AI, whether it be text, audio, imagery, or video, then this should be clearly highlighted for transparency
  6. Intellectual Property – Are we infringing on other people’s IP? This is tricky as these models are trained on existing datasets, but should avoid referencing the work of any people (e.g. writers or artists) without their prior permission in our AI usage.
  7. Avoiding Fake Media – Are we creating realistic media that is based on the likeness of real individuals? Can these images be used in the future to spread misinformation, regardless of initial intention? We should avoid doing this as much as possible.

Tom concluded his section by asking a really important question: What does AI and the future possibilities mean for us as humans? Tom brought up how the adoption of AI technology across all aspects of society could start to alter human intelligence, wisdom and intuition. 

He pointed to the invention of technologies like GPS, which despite being incredibly useful, has eroded the human ability to navigate and direct ourselves using reference points. In the past, humans had an innate sense of direction and could often instinctively know which direction was north or south – in the West this ability has certainly declined.

We then started to discuss if an overreliance on AI eventually lead to a situation where we lose our ability to think critically, to process information and make our own conclusions. 

Throughout the discussion with the attendees in responses to our prompts, there were a few points made by participants that were particularly relevant that are worth mentioning:

What do you think? This is a really difficult topic to tackle and things are developing every day! For more information, please take a look at the reading list below, where I’ve linked some information on topics covered above, or about the tensions between AI usage and positive impact! 

Reading List:

The Bad:

The Good:

In other news – we also organised and hosted two BBN Run Club events at Blue Earth – a scenic early morning 5K at a relaxed pace along the River Thames.

These were to help promote our charitable project, Project Salt Run, working with 1% For The Planet to raise money and awareness for those most affected by the climate crisis by our Founder, Hannah Cox, who will be running 4030KM across India. More details on this coming soon!

Thanks to everyone who came down, we hope you enjoyed the event as much as we did 🚀

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