Everyday AI Podcast – An AI and ChatGPT Podcast - EP 79: The Importance of Ethics in AI
Episode Date: August 14, 2023We're always hearing about the latest AI technology. But how should we actually be using AI as a whole? What ethics and rules should be in place to make sure AI is used properly and effectively? ...Today Moe Alo, Senior Sales Leader at IBM, joins us to discuss.Newsletter: Sign-up for our free daily newsletterMore on this: Episode PageJoin the discussion: Ask Moe and Jordan questions about AI and ethicsUpcoming Episodes: Check out the upcoming Everyday AI Livestream lineupWebsite: YourEverydayAI.comEmail The Show: info@youreverydayai.comConnect with Jordan on LinkedInTimestamps:[00:01:00] Daily AI news[00:04:23] About Moe Alo and IBM[00:04:23] IBM's importance to AI[00:09:20] How should we be using AI?[00:13:28] How IBM approaches AI and ethics[00:18:28] What IBM is doing in the AI space[00:20:49] Importance of accessibility in generative AI systems[00:24:00] Moe's final takeawayTopics Covered in This Episode:- Concern about companies not prioritizing ethics in AI- AI's potential in education and its real-world applications- Ensuring individual responsibility and protecting personal data in AI usage- Dismissing extreme fears of AI leading to mass destruction or job loss- Accessibility and awareness of potential dangers and limitations of AI- Examples of misuse of AI as learning opportunities- Importance of using AI in an effective and optimized manner- IBM's history and hopes for their approach to AI- Concern about AI disadvantaging certain groups of people- Ethical concerns regarding programmatic ads generated by AI- Existence of bad actors in the market seeking to monetize AI- Surprising lack of awareness about the advancements and impact of AI- IBM's commitment to ethics and responsibility in AI- AI ethics board and privacy board at IBM- AI by design process and pillars of trust, transparency, privacy, fairness, explainability, and robustness- IBM's stance against military applications and surveillance technology- AI's role in HR tools and resume screening- Partnerships with Vatican and University of Notre Dame for AI ethics- IBM's support for precision regulations and guardrails for AI technology- Watson X platform for enterprise AI, including Watson X.ai, Watson X.data, and Watson X.governance subsets- Importance of accessibility and leveling the playing field in generative AI- Updates on AI-related news, such as The New York Times' terms of service and funding for Anthropic- Amazon's use of AI summaries in product reviews- Excitement about the accessibility and benefits of large language modelsSend Everyday AI and Jordan a text message. (We can't reply back unless you leave contact info) Start Here ▶️Not sure where to start when it comes to AI? Start with our Start Here Series. You can listen to the first drop -- Episode 691 -- or get free access to our Inner Cricle community and all episodes: StartHereSeries.com Also, here's a link to the entire series on a Spotify playlist.
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How should we be using generative AI?
It seems like there's no shortage of tools and softwares that can help us do our jobs better,
but we don't really ever talk about the ethics behind it.
So that's what we're going to be doing today on Everyday AI.
So welcome.
This is your daily live stream podcast and free daily newsletter,
helping everyday people keep up with what's going on in the world of Generative AI.
So yeah, we can always read about it.
But this is where we actually talk about it.
And we say, here's what it means to your business, to your company, to your career.
So extremely excited today.
We have a senior leader from IBM joining us.
But before we get into that, let's talk real quick about what's going on in the world of AI news.
Let's make sense of this.
All right.
So first story, the New York Times just said that companies can't use.
use its site to train AI models.
So they updated their terms of service,
kind of barring different AI chats from crawling their site and using that information,
or sorry, restricting end users to use that information.
So very interesting timing, especially as OpenAI kind of released, so to speak,
their GPT bot, which told companies how they crawl their website and use their information.
So this, I could talk about this one for hours,
Keep your eye on that because I think it is pretty noteworthy.
All right, next piece of news.
Chad GPT competitor, raped in a huge fundraising round.
So Anthropic, which makes the LLM Cloud 2 recently just announced a $100 million investment from a Korean
telco company, SK Telecom.
So if you don't know, Anthropic was founded by former open AI leaders, the makers of chat
GPT. And they recently raised about three months ago, $450 million. So a lot of people haven't even
used Anthropic in their Cloud 2. It's definitely worth checking out if you haven't already. And
you know, pretty big fundraising news here, bringing in another $100 million investment.
All right. So last but not least in our AI news today, Amazon just, just noted, just less than
an hour ago, just released that they are going to be using AI summaries in reviews. So they actually
just started to roll this out across the U.S. to select users, but more or less, here's what it means.
You are going to see AI summaries of product reviews, which I think is fascinating because so many
times, at least for me, you know, whether it's on Amazon or any other sites, I spend so much
time reading reviews. So we'll see how accurate these AI summaries are. And there will also be a
product insights feature that kind of highlights common trends found in reviews. So maybe I'll
spend less time reading reviews and more time spending even more money on Amazon. So I'm excited.
I'm excited to talk AI in ethics. It's something we don't talk about a lot. Don't worry. It's not just
going to be blabbing. It's not just going to be me blabbing today. I have a great guess. So let's bring
in our guest for today, Moe, who is the senior sales leader, a senior sales leader at IBM. Mo,
thank you for joining us. Jordan, I appreciate you having me. I'm excited to talk to. I'm a big
fan of your work. Thank you. Hey, appreciate that. So as a reminder for those of you joining us live,
like Nelson here, who's saying greetings, this is a live show. This is unscripted. So if you have a question
for Mo, just about AI and ethics,
or if you're just interested even in,
hey, what's IBM doing in this space?
Make sure to drop a comment
like Michael, who says Cloud Rocks.
I like Cloud as well.
So Mo, real quick, just tell everyone a little bit
what you're doing at IBM.
What's kind of your role as a senior sales leader
at IBM and tail?
Sure.
At IBM, my role is I cover financial services.
So I work with a sales leader,
group of accounts. And, you know, we, we believe in consultative process and the collaborative
approach. And so what we do is try to learn as much about our clients and their pain points,
and then, you know, work with them to see how we can assist them. As far as AI, and you probably
are aware of this, IBM has been, you know, at the forefront of AI for a long time.
It's something that we're proud of, and we are as excited as everybody else is with all the new advancements that have been going on and how we can satisfy the needs of our clients and make sure that they're keeping up and also in appropriate ways.
Yeah, it's something I don't think we even talk about enough on the show is just IBM's role in this.
because I think if not for IBM's initial investment decades ago in Open AI,
you know, Watson, Deep Blue, all of these, you know, now that we kind of consider, quote, unquote,
old school advancements in AI, I don't know if we'd be here.
Like, what do you think about that, Mo?
And how important do you think that IBM has been to even where we're at now, even with other companies?
Well, I think you're right.
You're spot on.
you know, IBM has invested into the research and into the process of developing an AI system
and an AI that works and is trusted, you know, Deep Blue and Watson, you know, going back to, you know,
was it Gary Kasparov, the chess player that was defeated by Deep Blue and then Watson won Jeopardy.
And so it's kind of like the moon landing, right?
Those are kind of like the first markers in making, you know, a large publicity for AI and what large language models can do.
And what that does is gives us, you know, a basically two decades of working with AI models and fine-tuning them and learning how to best deploy them.
So, yeah, that's something we're really proud of.
Yeah, yeah. And timely, timely comment from from Miguel joining the live stream here saying, growing up when I saw Watson doing his thing in Jeopardy, I was like, I want this for my personal life. And now we have this for our personal life. So Mo is someone that's been involved in, you know, computer and technologies for a long time. Can you just speak to now like, you know, even Miguel's comment here, we have this in our personal life. Yeah. I mean, it's funny, right? We still don't.
Maybe a lot of us don't realize it and don't see it that way, but it is.
And Jordan, I saw your pod recently on, you know, how you can personalize chat GPT, right, to learn how to write like you, which I think is awesome.
I mean, I think that's incredible that we can actually do that.
And the way that you explained it made it very easy for people to use.
Look, AIs is advancing at such an incredible rate and such a phenomenal rate.
everybody is being able to use it and learn from it.
And Jordan, you do a daily show, right?
Five days a week.
You take Saturdays and Sundays off, thank God.
But you could probably do an hourly show.
I mean, all you have to do is be on Twitter, be on LinkedIn,
and follow people that are pushing AI and just relating the latest developments.
And, you know, there's so much that,
what you touched on earlier, ethics is obviously a big concern, not just for IBM, but for all the
large companies out there that are involved in AI and developing AI.
Yeah. And kind of finally bringing us to our topic here, you know, ethics. Because one thing
that I find interesting is a lot of times bigger companies, so enterprise level companies that
IBM would normally be working with are most set up or most or maybe set up the best to
leverage generative AI. But a lot of times the larger enterprise companies at times maybe the
last to to adapt. So what's just your overall take on ethics and generative AI? How should we
be using it? Should, you know, whether you're working at a, you know, a large company or small
company, should we be using generative AI in all aspects of our work? Like, what are your,
what are your thoughts on that? Because, you know, it's, it's a deep conversation and people have
opinions, but, you know, what are your thoughts just, you know, given your background, Mo? Yeah. So,
let's try to unpack it and categorize it, right? Should we, let's say, should we be using
AI? Absolutely. I saw your, your, your pod regarding should chat GPTV band and
schools and I love the approach that you took. Why would we give our students a disadvantage when
they're going to be able to use it in the real world, learn how to use it? You know, what's the biggest,
what's the most common statement that I've heard at least is, you know, job. Humans are not
going to be replaced by AI. They're going to be replaced by people that use AI, right? But the reason
that that statement took off is because it's true.
and it makes sense, right? We have to learn how to use it. You know, it's like, I think you had mentioned,
like banning the internet, right, et cetera. And so it is important for everyone to have an understanding
of it, not only for them to learn, but also so that they can know the trouble spots. They can go
through trial and error. You know, there's a lot of, let's go back to why it's important,
ethics and AI. I think that there's a personal responsibility, right? User,
ethics, how are we as individuals using it?
There's the enterprise responsibility, protecting data of the enterprise,
of personal data that enterprises collect.
The outcomes of AI, right?
Are we going to be creating the big fear that everybody has,
the Terminator movie type AI?
Everybody dies or people lose their jobs, obviously,
You know, that's not the case.
That's an incredible stretch.
And then accessibility, I think, is important.
You know, everybody needs to have access.
Everybody needs to be able to benefit from the tools
that are out there.
And I think as users, we are developing scar tissue
and muscle memory when it comes to the dangers of AI.
Just kind of like Photoshop, when that first became popular,
You know, we kind of figured it out.
It didn't take long to where, okay, that looks Photoshop, et cetera.
Same goes for deep fakes.
I know that there's a lot of talk about watermarking,
AI generated content, and there was a recent executive order
or agreement on eight principles of AI that I'm sure you've covered,
so I don't need to tell you.
Your audience has to be the most educated.
There's like nothing new I can tell your audience.
That's how good job you do.
So hallucinations we all know about it.
We've heard of, we've heard of, you know, situations where people, you know, got caught up or, you know, lawyers using AI that made up cases.
And, you know, those things are unfortunate.
But I think that's part of our process as everybody to learn, you know, what exactly AI can do.
But how should we be using it?
I think we should be using it in the most effective, optimized way and doing our first.
part to have guardrails, you know, just like anything else. The internet has guardrails,
you know, TV does as well. Yeah. Let's see what Dr. Rastapa has. Yeah. Yeah, great, great
transition here. So yeah, Dr. Rostafa get us with a great question saying there's two sides to
ethics, the creative end and the user end. So kind of asking here, what's the responsibility
of companies like IBM who are, you know, actually helping to create? You know, we haven't even
talked about Watsonx.a.I., which we'll talk about here in a second, but what's kind of,
what do you think is the responsibility of the companies that are helping to develop these
AI systems? You know, obviously on the back end, as users, you know, we, we have to have some
of those ethics and guardrails, Mo, that you talked about in place. But what are your thoughts
for, you know, companies that are helping create these AI systems? It's a huge responsibility.
It's a great question. That's something that IBM. I'm very proud of the way we take
it extremely seriously. We have a AI ethics board. We have a privacy board. Any application that is
developed goes through a AI by design, AI ethics by design process. We have AI pillars of trust,
transparency, privacy, fairness, explainability, robustness. Any, and there you go, I love it.
has to go through this process. Of course, anything that touches on a military application,
anything that comes close to surveillance, facial recognition, those are things that IBM takes
a very, very strong stance on. HR tools, you know, I think I read a stat from, was a
Zip recruiter that I think almost 85% or something, a really high percentage, don't hold me to it.
of resumes are initially screened by AI.
And so think about the implications there.
Admissions into schools, education, political purposes,
infrastructure, anything that's going to be harmful.
So, and this is, we're a leader in this field,
IBM signed the call to action by the Vatican back in 2020,
formed a partnership with the University of Notre Dame,
with an AI Ethics Institute.
There's been so many different regulations
that IBM has been behind and regulatory bodies.
And what our position is,
is we believe in precision regulations.
So we don't want to stunt the technology, right?
The use of the technology, that's where we want,
you know, there needs to be guardrails, right?
But we are proponents of advancing the technology always.
That's never something that we would be against, you know, at least at this point in time.
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Yeah.
And, you know,
just the piece,
like I love Moe that you broke down.
like step by step what IBM is doing in regards to ethics in AI because it is important, you know, for
end users or for those that are ultimately consuming content from other enterprise companies that
are using AI. I think it's important to know the aspects here that you kind of laid out.
But a great question here from Matthew. So we'll kind of transition here because, you know,
I think we talked about this on the show before, but as an example, you know, some big companies are
cutting down or downsizing their ethics teams, right? So Microsoft is one. They laid off kind of their
ethics team that taught or that was, you know, working with ethics and AI. So what are your,
what are your thoughts on, you know, larger companies or, you know, we don't have to single them out,
but, you know, what are your thoughts on these companies that aren't maybe prioritizing ethics as highly
as IBM or maybe as highly as they should be.
Yeah.
You know, I think everybody's learning, right?
IBM, we've been around for over 100 years.
We're one of the, if not the, oldest technology company.
I would hope that there's a pivot there somewhere,
that it wasn't just, hey, let's just take the guard drills off
and we're not doing anything.
I would have to assume that there is something that they have in place or in the works.
But, you know, obviously it's not something that we would be in favor
rather than I would be supportive of.
I mean, we all know the typical example,
or let's say the easy example to understand is people
that would be disadvantaged by an AI
because of their ethnic group or their zip code
or they get a higher interest rate
or they don't get approved for loans, et cetera.
That's something that I hope we as a society
have really moved on and realized
that that needs to be taken care of.
but the ethics around AI have to move as quickly as the AI itself is.
I know there was a recent study by, I think it was by MIT Technology Review.
And this is a little more in the weeds,
but it found that programmatic ads are spamming,
and they're, you know, let's say Google ads are similar.
And they're being used on websites that does.
don't necessarily have correct information or might be misleading information.
And so those are the dangers.
And then a lot of those are just generated by AI.
So the market's being flooded with people that want to monetize.
There will always be bad actors and we have to account for that.
Yeah, absolutely.
And one thing we haven't even talked about yet that I'm excited.
So let's quickly just kind of transition here because I'd love to talk real quick about
what IBM is actually doing in the space because we haven't even talked about this a lot.
But, you know, Watsonx.a.i. So, you know, most people, and we kind of talked about this to open
the show, most people have heard of Watson. And it may have been actually for society, you know,
seeing Watson on, you know, Jeopardy may have been people's first big or main introduction into
what AI is, into what its capabilities are. But real quick, just talk about Watsonx.com.a.I.
So this is kind of more for enterprise companies, but just briefly, Mo, tell us why Watsonx.a.I might be worth looking at for four companies.
Absolutely. And it's something that we're very excited about. Like you said, IBM has a deep history with AI and Watson is a name that everybody knows.
And what we've done is we've created the Watson X platform. And it's for enterprise, like you said.
And it consists, you think of it with three subsets. Watsonx.AI, which is going to validate, tune, deploy, AI models.
WatsonX. Data allows you to scale the AI workloads for all data anywhere, you know, on-prem, cloud, et cetera.
And then Watsonx.x.goviness, and this goes to our topic today.
You know, think of that as the nutrition label of your data, you know, responsible,
transparent AI workflows.
You want to know and make sure that the data that you're putting into your business is safe,
that it's reliable, that is trusted.
What we do is we help enterprises get off to a good start with a solid, already trained model
with where then the customer would be able to insert their data and then also the domain or
industry knowledge.
and that allows then the enterprise to have a structure,
it has a head start, if you will,
and then the guard wheels that are necessary.
So we're really excited about it,
and obviously it's off to a great start.
Yeah, and, you know, having access to these platforms,
you know, whether it's, you know, IBMs,
you know, Watson X,
and I know that they are even integrating Meta's Lama 2
into Watson XAI.
But I think having access to these generative AI systems,
whether it's at an enterprise level or just as an individual,
I think gives you so much extra benefit
that maybe we didn't have a year or two ago.
And I bring that up because, you know,
Harold here joining the show has a great question
because he's asking more about the approach to accessibility.
Because, Mo, you kind of already referenced this,
that, you know, these generative tools aren't necessarily open to everyone, right? Like,
depending on what, what end, you know, because again, there's, there's Google has their,
tools and software. Microsoft does. IBM does. You know, and depending on where you are or your budget,
you may not have access to all of these. So what's the right way? It may be not asking from an IBM
perspective, but as society, how do we tackle this accessibility piece? And, you know,
to create as level of a playing field as possible,
because I think that's one of the biggest,
one of the biggest issues facing generative AI use right now
is this accessibility piece.
It's a great question.
And Harold, thank you for asking.
IBM has always been extremely involved in the communities, right?
So we have partnerships with universities with local schools.
We have a whole division.
division that is around accessibility.
Similar to what I said about the AI ethics involvement
in the design process, we also have a accessibility check.
And so now accessibility, I can see there might be two meanings,
access to technology, but also access for those who
have different abilities, right?
And so IBM has a focus on both.
We launched Skills Build where we have a
free online platform where people are able to go in, learn, earn certificates.
And AI is obviously one of the big topics in that.
And I point you to skillsbuild.org.
And there you go.
There you are.
And so this is something IBM takes very, very seriously.
And we're happy to do so.
Yeah.
And I know this has been a long show,
but I do want to end on this Mo.
You have such a great background,
and I think you've shared so much great information today.
But what would your takeaway be for business leaders,
for even individuals as we kind of grapple with this piece on ethics and AI?
What would your takeaway be for people that are trying to use it in a responsible way
to grow their business?
How can people do that?
Well, I think they should, number one, watch the everyday AI podcast every morning.
But no, you do a great service, Jordan.
I want to make sure I get that stated.
I appreciate what you do.
You cut through and also highlight the things that are important.
But I mean, as far as your question, I think what a lot of us don't realize or maybe
haven't thought about is AI has been used.
and everything that we do for a long time, right?
I think what Chad GPT did was kind of shine the spotlight.
You know, I think our CEO compared it
to what Netscape did for the internet.
And so, which is great, which is, you know,
something that everybody is excited about
and the accessibility to millions of people around the world
to using a large language model like chat GPT
has been phenomenal.
But my advice is to always ensure
that you have ethics at a platform.
forefront. There's a lot of damage that can be done to a lot of people and a lot of businesses,
small businesses, if ethics is not a serious component of anything that you are developing or
rolling out to the public. And so that's really my advice. Choose a great partner. You have in-house
talent as well as consultative, you know, get a view of the outside world of what your
competition is doing, make sure that you have ethics at the forefront. And I think it's an
exciting time. This is, you know, one of the most impactful technological advancements
in history. We're all part of it. We're all, you know, right in the middle of it. And it's
exciting. Yeah. Speaking of exciting, this, at least for me, and I hope if you're out there
listening and tuning in live as well, I hope this was an exciting conversation, because
because we went over a little bit of everything, Mo, from ethics and the background of even IBM
to how we can look forward to responsibly using AI in the future.
So thank you so much for spending some time on the Everyday AI show to help us all figure
this out together.
It's a pleasure.
I'll be watching.
Thanks a lot, Jordy.
All right.
And just as a reminder, don't worry if you couldn't keep up with everything, go to Your Everyday
AI.com.
Sign up for our free daily newsletter.
And we're going to have a recap of the conversation that we just had with,
Mo talking about ethics and everything else.
And if you are listening on the podcast, don't worry, look in the show notes today.
We'll have links to this.
And even if you want to jump in kind of our daily LinkedIn thread and ask Mo questions,
if you are listening on the podcast and you're like, oh, it would have been great to join in live.
Don't worry, you can click and do that.
So thanks again to Mo for joining us.
And thank you.
And we hope to see you back tomorrow and every day on Everyday AI.
Thanks.
Pleasure, Jordan.
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