While many employees fear that artificial intelligence will take their jobs, one business revealed that it is hiring the first CEO robot in human form.
Mika is a joint research project by Hanson Robotics and Dictador, a Polish rum company, which customized the CEO to symbolize the business and its distinct principles.
Mika claimed that itĀ could quickly and accurately create data-driven content using sophisticated artificial intelligence and machine learning algorithms in a Dictador company video.
Nevertheless, there is a “significant delay” in Mika’s processing and answering to your question, according to report.
“Humanizing” artificial intelligence is crucial, according to David Hanson, CEO of Hanson Robotics, who was crucial in getting Mika hired at Dictador.
“It is my firm belief that in order for artificial intelligence to be truly safe and exceptionally intelligent, we must teach it to care about humans.” Hanson said on “Mornings with Maria” earlier in the week, “I think humanizing that is a very important direction.”
Simonetti took to the streets of New York City to gather opinions from Americans about the robot boss.
People would “absolutely” treat it with compassion, according to one, and humans should be kind to everything that can think.
In contrast, a man stated that since robots are “just machines,” they “don’t need respect.”
Most participants agreed that AI would probably keep replacing humans in the workforce.
Some stated that they would not accept a job from a robot.
Mika’s sister Sophia was first introduced by Hanson Robotics in 2016. Sophia has a history of threatening to “destroy humans.”
President Biden signed an executive order earlier this week mandating businesses to notify the government of any threats to national security and safeguard Americans from the possible dangers of artificial intelligence.