Artificial Intelligence Revolution; Unlikely Adventures of David Grann | 60 Minutes Full Episodes

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there is a revolution happening right now in the world of artificial intelligence confounding are we ready for it I am rarely speechless I don't know what to make of this with rare access we will show you what Google is developing and the questions they're asking themselves on my way I will bring an apple to you as they begin to unveil computing power that will change every part of our world forever I've been working on AI for decades now and I've always believed that it's going to be the most important invention that Humanity will ever make Please Don't Judge Me Do you like books about adventures and heroism true stories with unbelievable outcomes then author David Gran is your man today he's one of the world's top selling writers in part because of his Hands-On years-long research that breathes life back into his Fearless characters the grand is the first to admit I am not an Explorer I mean I would have been the first to die on the island let's be perfectly honest we're gonna play this out what's the cause of death oh my cause of death Terror I'm Leslie Stahl I'm Bill Whitaker I'm Anderson Cooper I'm Sharon alfonsi I'm John worthheim I'm Scott Pelley those stories and more tonight on 60 Minutes we may look on our time as the moment civilization was transformed as it was by fire Agriculture and electricity in 2023 we learned that a machine taught itself how to speak to humans like a peer which is to say with creativity truth error and lies the technology known as a chatbot is only one of the recent breakthroughs in artificial intelligence machines that can teach themselves superhuman skills we explored what's coming next at Google a leader in this new world CEO Sundar pichai told us AI will be as good or as evil as human nature allows the revolution he says is coming faster than you know do you think Society is prepared for what's coming you know there are two ways I think about it on one hand I I feel no uh because you know the pace at which we can think and adapt as societal institutions compared to the PACE at which the technology is evolving there seems to be a mismatch on the other hand compared to any other technology I've seen more people worried about it earlier in its life cycle so I feel optimistic the number of people you know who have started worrying about the implications and hence the conversations are starting in a serious way as well I guess our conversations with 50 year old Sundar pichai started at Google's new campus in Mountain View California it runs on 40 percent solar power and collects more water than it uses high tech that pachai couldn't have imagined growing up in India with no telephone at home believe their own evading list to get a rotary phone and for about five years and it finally came home I can still recall it vividly it changed our lives to me it was the first moment I understood the power of what getting access to technology meant so it's probably led me to be doing what I'm doing today what he's doing since 2019 is leading both Google and its parent company alphabet valued at 1.3 trillion dollars worldwide Google runs 90 of internet searches and 70 percent of smartphones we're really excited about but its dominance was attacked this past February when Microsoft linked its search engine to a chatbot in a race for AI dominance Google just released its chatbot named Bard it's really here to help you brainstorm ideas to generate content like a speech or a blog post or an email we were introduced to Bard by Google vice president Xiao and Senior Vice President James manika here's Bard and the first thing we learned was that Bard does not look for answers on the internet like Google search does so I wanted to get inspiration from some of the best speeches in the world Bard's replies come from a self-contained program that was mostly self-taught our experience was unsettling confounding absolutely confounding Bard appeared to possess the sum of human knowledge ah with microchips more than 100 000 times faster than the human brain summarize than we asked Bard to summarize the New Testament it did in five seconds and 17 words in Latin we asked for it in Latin that took another four seconds then we played with a famous six-word short story often attributed to Hemingway for sale baby shoes never worn wow the only prompt we gave was finish this story in five seconds holy cow the shoes were a gift from my wife but we never had a baby they were from the six word prompt Bard created a deeply human tale with characters it invented including a man whose wife could not conceive and a stranger grieving after a miscarriage and longing for closure uh I am rarely speechless I don't know what to make of this give me we asked for the story in verse in five seconds there was a poem written by a machine with breathtaking insight into the mystery of faith Bard wrote she knew her baby's Soul would always be alive the humanity at superhuman speed was a shock how is this possible James manico told us that over several months Bard read most everything on the internet and created a model of what language looks like rather than search its answers come from this language model so for example if I said to you Scott peanut butter and jelly right so it tries and learns to predict okay so peanut butter usually is followed by jelly it tries to predict the most probable next words based on everything it's learned so it's not going out to find stuff it's just predicting the next word but it doesn't feel like that we asked Bard why it helps people and it replied quote because it makes me happy barred to my eye appears to be thinking appears to be making judgments that's not what's happening these machines are not sentient they are not aware of themselves they're not sentient they're not aware of themselves they can exhibit behaviors that look like that because keep in mind they've learned from us we're sentient beings we have beings that have feelings emotions ideas thoughts perspectives we've reflected all that in books in novels in fiction so when they learn from that they build patterns from that so it's no surprise to me that the exhibitive behavior sometimes looks like maybe there's somebody behind it there's nobody there these are not sentient beings Zimbabwe born Oxford educated James manika holds a new position at Google his job is to think about how Ai and Humanity will best coexist AI has the potential to change many ways in which you've thought about Society about what we're able to do the the problems we can solve but AI itself will pose its own problems could Hemingway write a better short story maybe but Bard can write a million before Hemingway could finish one imagine that level of automation across the economy a lot of people can be replaced by this technology yes there are some job occupations that will start to decline over time they're also new job categories that will grow over time but the biggest change will be the jobs that will be changed something like more than two-thirds will have their definitions change not go away but change because they're now being assisted by the AI and by automation so this is a profound change which has implications for skills how do we assist people building new skills learn to work alongside machines and how do these complement what people do today this is going to impact every product across every company and and so that's why I think it's a very very profound technology and so we are just in early days every product in every company that's right AI will impact everything so for example you could be a radiologist you know if I if you think about five to ten years from now you're going to have a AI collaborator with you it may triage you come in the morning you let's say you have 100 things to go through it may say these are the most serious cases you need to look at first or when you're looking at something it may pop up and say you may have missed something important why won't we you know why won't we take advantage of a super powered assistant to help you across everything you do you may be a student trying to learn math or history and you know you will have something helping you we ask pachai what jobs would be disrupted he said knowledge workers people like writers accountants Architects and ironically software Engineers AI writes computer code too today Sundar pichai walks a narrow line a few employees have quit some believing that Google's AI rollout is too slow others too fast there are some serious flaws there's a return of inflation James manika asked Bart about inflation it wrote an instant essay in economics and recommended five books but days later we checked none of the books is real Bard fabricated the titles this very human trait error with confidence is called in the industry hallucination are you getting a lot of hallucinations uh yes uh you know we just expected no one in the in the field has yet saw the hallucination problems all models uh do have uh this is an issue is it a solvable problem it's a matter of intense debate I think we'll make progress to help cure hallucinations Bard features a Google it button that leads to old-fashioned search Google has also built safety filters into Bard to screen for things like hate speech and bias how great a risk is the spread of disinformation AI will challenge that in a deeper way the scale of this problem is going to be much bigger bigger problems he says with fake news and fake images it will be possible with AI to create uh you know a video easily where it could be Scott saying something or me saying something and we never said that and it could look accurate but you know at a societal scale you know can cause a lot of harm is barred safe for society the baby have launched it today uh as an experiment in a limited way uh I think so but we all have to be responsible in each step along the way pachai told us he's being responsible by holding back for more testing Advanced versions of Bard that he says can reason plan and connect to internet search you are letting this out slowly so that Society can get used to it that's one part of it one part is also so that we get the user feedback and we can develop more robust safety layers before we build before we deploy more capable models of the AI issues we talked about the most mysterious is called emergent properties some AI systems are teaching themselves skills that they weren't expected to have how this happens is not well understood for example one Google AI program adapted on its own after it was prompted in the language of Bangladesh which it was not trained to know we discovered that with very few amounts of prompting in Bengali you can now translate all of Bengali so now all of a sudden we now have a research effort where we're now trying to get to a thousand languages there is an aspect of this which we call all of us in the field call it as a black box you know you don't fully understand and you can't quite tell why it said this or why it got wrong we have some ideas and our ability to understand this gets better over time but that's where the state of the art is you don't fully understand how it works and yet you've turned it loose on society yeah let me put it this way I don't think we fully understand how a human mind works either was it from that black box we wondered that Bard Drew its short story that seems so disarmingly human that talked about the pain that humans feel it talked about Redemption how did it do all of those things if it's just trying to figure out what the next right word is I mean I've had these experiences uh talking with Bard as well there are two views of this you know there are a set of people who view this as look these are just algorithms they're just repeating what it's seen online then there is the view where these algorithms are showing emergent properties to be creative to reason to plan and so on right and and personally I think we need to be uh we need to approach this with humility part of the reason I think it's good that some of these Technologies are getting out is so that Society you know people like you and others can process what's happening and we begin this conversation and debate and I think it's important to do that when we come back we'll take you inside Google's artificial intelligence Labs where robots are learning the revolution in artificial intelligence is the center of a debate ranging from those who hope it will save Humanity to those who predict Doom Google lies somewhere in the optimistic middle introducing AI in steps so civilization can get used to it we saw what's coming next in machine learning at Google's AI lab in London a company called Deep Mind where the future looks something like this look at that oh my goodness they've got a pretty good kick on them good game a soccer match at deepmind looks like fun and games but here's the thing humans did not program these robots to play they learned the game by themselves it's coming up with these interesting different strategies different ways to walk different ways to block and they're doing it they're scoring over and over again this robot here Raya hadzel vice president of research and Robotics showed us how Engineers used motion capture technology to teach the AI program how to move like a human but on the soccer pitch the robots were told only that the object was to score the self-learning programs spent about two weeks testing different moves it discarded those that didn't work built on those that did and created All-Stars there's another goal and with practice they get better Hensel told us that independent from the robots the AI program plays thousands of games from which it learns and invents its own tactics here you see that red player is going to grab it but instead it just stops it hands it back passes it back and then goes for the goal and the AI figured out how to do that on its own that's right that's right and it takes a while at first all the players just run after the ball together like a gaggle of uh you know six-year-olds the first time they're they're they're playing ball over time what we start to see is now ah what's the strategy you go after the ball I'm coming around this way or we should pass or I should block while you get to the goal so we see all of that coordination emerging in the play foreign this is a lot of fun but what are the practical implications of what we're seeing here this is the type of research that can eventually lead to robots that can come out of the factories and work in other types of human environments you know think about mining think about dangerous construction work or exploration or Disaster Recovery Raya hadsall is among 1 000 humans at deepmind the company was co-founded just 12 years ago by CEO Dennis hassabus so if I think back to 2010 when we started nobody was doing AI there was nothing going on in Industry people used to eye roll when we talk to them investors about doing AI so we couldn't we could barely get two cents together to start off with which isn't crazy if you think about now the billions being invested into AI startups and Cambridge Harvard MIT hasabis has degrees in computer science and Neuroscience his PhD is in human imagination and imagine this when he was 12 in his age group he was the number two chess champion in the world [Applause] it was through games that he came to AI I've been working on AI for for decades now and I've always believed that it's going to be the most important invention that Humanity will ever make will the pace of change outstrip our ability to adapt I don't think so I think that we um you know we're sort of an infinitely adaptable species um you know you look at today us using all of our smartphones and other devices and we effortlessly sort of adapt to these new technologies and this is going to be another one of those changes like that among the biggest changes her Deep Mind was the discovery that self-learning machines can be creative so this is uh asaba showed us a game playing program that learns it's called Alpha zero and it dreamed up a winning chess strategy no human had ever seen but this is just a machine how does it achieve creativity if it plays against itself tens tens of millions of times so it can explore parts of Chess that maybe human chess players and and programmers who program chess computers haven't thought about before it never gets tired it never gets hungry it just plays chess all the time yes it's it's kind of amazing thing to see because actually you set off for zero in the morning and it starts off playing randomly by lunchtime you know it's able to beat me and beat most chess players and then by the evening it's stronger than the world champion demos asaba's Soul Deep Mind to Google in 2014 one reason was to get his hands on this Google has the enormous computing power that AI needs this Computing Center is in Pryor Oklahoma but Google has 23 of these putting it near the top in computing power in the world this is one of two advances that make AI ascendant now first the sum of all human knowledge is online and second Brute Force Computing that very Loosely approximates the neural networks and talents of the brain things like memory imagination planning reinforcement learning these are all things that are known about how the brain does it and we wanted to replicate some of that in our AI systems you predict one of those those are some of the elements that led to deepmind's greatest achievements so far solving an impossible problem in biology proteins are building blocks of life but only a tiny fraction were understood because 3D mapping of just one could take years deepmind created an AI program for the protein problem and set it Loose well it took us about four or five years to to figure out how to build the system it was probably our most complex project we've ever undertaken but once we did that it can solve a protein structure in a matter of seconds and actually over the last year we did all the 200 million proteins that are known to science how long would it have taken using traditional methods well the rule of thumb I was always told by my biologist friends is that it takes a whole PhD five years to do one protein structure experimentally so if you think 200 million times five that's a billion years a PhD time it would have taken deepmind made its protein database public a gift to humanity hasabis called it how has it been used it's been used in an enormously broad number of ways actually from malaria vaccines to developing new enzymes that can eat plastic waste to a new antibiotics most AI systems today do one or maybe two things well the soccer robots for example can't write up a grocery list or book your travel or drive your car the ultimate goal is what's called artificial general intelligence a learning machine that can score on a wide range of talents would such a machine be conscious of itself so that's another great question we you know philosophers haven't really settled on a definition of Consciousness yet but if we mean by sort of self-awareness and these kinds of things um you know I think there's a possibility AIS one day could be I definitely don't think they are today um but I think again this is one of the fascinating scientific things we're going to find out on this journey towards AI even unconscious current AI is superhuman in narrow ways back in California we saw Google Engineers teaching skills that robots will practice continuously on their own push the blue cube to the blue triangle they comprehend instructions push the yellow hexagon to the yellow heart and learn to recognize objects what would you like how about an apple how about an apple on my way I will bring an apple to you we're trying Vincent vanook senior director of Robotics showed us how robot 106 was trained on millions of images I am going to pick up the apple and can recognize all the items on a crowded countertop if we can't give the robot A diversity of experiences a lot more different objects in different settings the robot gets better at every one of them now that humans have pulled the forbidden fruit of artificial knowledge thank you we start the Genesis of a new Humanity AI can utilize all the information in the world what no human could ever hold in their head and I wonder if humanity is diminished by this enormous capability that we're developing I think the possibility of AI do not diminish Humanity in any way in fact in some ways I think they actually raise us to even deeper more profound questions Google's James manika sees this moment as an inflection point I think we're constantly adding these superpowers or capabilities to what humans can do in a way that expands possibilities as opposed to narrow them I think so I don't think of it as diminishing humans but it does raise some really profound questions for us who are we what do we value uh what are we good at how do we relate with each other those become very very important questions that are constantly going to be in one case sense exciting but perhaps unsettling too it is an unsettling moment critics argue the rush to AI comes too fast while competitive pressure among giants like Google and startups you've never heard of is propelling Humanity into the Future Ready or Not but I think if I take a 10-year Outlook it is so clear to me we will have some form of very capable intelligence that can do amazing things and we need to adapt as a society for it you know Google CEO Sundar pichai told us Society must quickly adapt with regulations for AI in the economy laws to punish abuse and treaties among nations to make AI safe for the world these are deep questions and you know we call this alignment you know one way we think about how do you develop AI systems that are aligned to human values and including morality this is why I think the development of this needs to include not just engineers but social scientists ethicists philosophers and so on and I think we have to be very thoughtful and I think these are all things Society needs to figure out as we move along it's not for a company to decide we'll end with a note that has never appeared on 60 Minutes but one in the AI Revolution you may be hearing often the proceeding was created with 100 percent human content explains the evolution of Google's founding don't be evil motto it's a lot more of a nuanced view but it Underpants how we think about things at 60 Minutes overtime.com incredibly enabling foreign some authors are perfect matches for their subject matter John Grisham was once a trial lawyer John le carray was once a spy by another name then there's David Gran who has emerged as one of the world's top selling writers and darling of Hollywood developers by venturing into unknown worlds abandoning his comfort zone the unlikely Adventures of David Grant his latest book The Wager tells of British Castaways from the 1740s it's an Open Water Quest that becomes a saga of shipwreck Anarchy betrayal and murder imagine Mutiny on the Bounty meets Lord of the Flies except every word of it really happened Grand success comes from yes meticulous reporting and Vivid writing but also from how he puts the pieces together you talk about structuring these stories as a puzzle yes is there only one way to solve this puzzle well I I'm very weird about this I I do always think there is some kind of idyllic form of a story like some like perfect pristine lost city that you're trying to find and get to we were going to structure the David Grant story yeah what would you suggest where would we start oh gosh and some archive looking semi-blind at some document that's where it always begins we can work with that we find our subject inside the national archives in the suburbs of London unboxing Dusty files Consulting documents so frail they require a pillow for support Grant spent two years playing detective Gathering facts Source material for his latest book we're gonna have to touch this really carefully he took us tumbling back in time to the 18th century do you see that communing with log books muster books and Diaries from the expedition of the HMS wager the warship featured in his book and here you see the little initials next to their names here you'll see Lieutenant you'll see a b means able Seaman how are you deciphering this when I first looked at a lot of these books it was like reading gibberish I was like what is this telling me and so I would have to look at it again look at it again start to figure out the codes the language they use but once you do these documents speak volumes all these names and symbols told a large story with their Empires at War a British Squadron of roughly two thousand Men set out to capture a Spanish Galleon filled with treasure off the Philippines that meant rounding Cape Horn negotiating some of the world's most treacherous Waters and winds but one of the ships in the Squadron lost its way just off the coast of Patagonia Grand showed us on his own map where the wager got into trouble a place aptly named the Gulf of pain they're battling into the Gulf of pain as they're coming around they're desperately frantically trying to avoid this land The Wager careened into rocks ripping apart 145 Castaways many sick from scurvy swam to the nearest Island you'd think the name alone the Gulf of pain would discourage visitors especially when the spectacled 56 year old man who admits he hates camping I spent the first two years doing research in a way very suited to my physical attributes which was in archives you're indoors yes indoors but there came a point where I began the fear that I could never fully understand what these 150 or so men had gone through on that island unless I went there's always a moment where something gnaws at you something unknown and so it was then that I decided to try to make this trip so in 2019 Grand flew to Chile and chartered a 52-foot vessel the boat looked you know looked pretty big oh this is good this is going to be it's going to be like a Jacques Cousteau Expedition we're going to be fine we kind of stay originally through these channels that are sheltered in Patagonia I think perfect it's beautiful it's a little cold it's winter but it's beautiful and then there's a certain point where the captain says to me all right now we got to go out into the open see if we're going to get to wager Island and that was my first glimpse of these terrifying Seas rough Seas it was truly terrifying um or at least for me as you said my captain seemed cool Grand and his crew endured the booty Waters over a 10-day Journey I had to sit on the floor hunker down the Dramamine was pumping me this is wager island named for the ship that washed up 300 years ago a spit of inhospitable land hugging the Pacific coast Scenic from a distance but you wouldn't want to spend the night The Castaways did months in unrelenting cold and whipping winds you know it's bad when celery is the big selling point the only edible thing that grows on the island though it does cure scurvy there were no animals I kept thinking there's got to be something like something they got to be a rat like we couldn't find anything this depth of detail it's Grand's earmark he's created his own sub-genre of narrative non-fiction keeping readers hanging with a page-turning mix of History journalism and True Crime but it's also literary pointillism you step back and glimpse a larger Tableau one with broader themes this fascinates you oh yeah yeah well you see I mean on this island you see everything playing out you see questions the leadership playing out you see questions of loyalty playing out questions of Duty playing out you see human nature being peeled back all that is taking place in this little Tempest and this was no one-off for his first book 2009 the lost city of Z the number one bestseller turned into a feature film everyone out of the vote Grand track through the Amazon to a place known as the green hell following the trail of a British Explorer Percy Fawcett did I hear right you took out supplemental life insurance yes I did I made sure I got extra travel insurance I had a little child at the time there is something and I think this is important it's not something I really like to talk about but there is something selfish about these Journeys and even something about the people I write about because many of them die on these Expeditions Graham swashbuckling takes on an added degree of difficulty on account of a degenerative eye condition he's had since his twenties what's the impact of that on your work I mean it's terrible when you're on an expedition like you're like can't see at night and you're stumbling getting lost or you're falling or you're on a boat or something like that but because I know I have this weakness I'm very acutely observing as much as I can and in some ways maybe paying more observation than if I could just take it in so easily Grant first put those powers of observation to work as a reporter on Capitol Hill but tired of Washington's spin he wanted to write real stories in 2003 he joined the New Yorker magazine in one issue he might write about an eccentric giant squid hunter in New Zealand in another a botched death penalty conviction in Texas all of it predicated on exhaustive Research Please Don't Judge Me from his office itself in inhospitable island of sorts wow at his home in a suburb of New York Grant showed us a pile of research from his 2017 book killers of the flower Moon the book centered on the mysterious deaths among members of the oil Rich Osage Nation in 1920s Oklahoma and boxed up in an archive where else Gran found a Smoking Gun evidence of a systemic murder campaign by Outsiders this was secret grand jury testimony and it was unmarked I mean it was a public record but I was like is this supposed to be am I allowed to look at this the book has sold nearly 2 million copies and it ignited a Hollywood auction the winning bid 5 million dollars the film directed by Martin Scorsese starring Leonardo DiCaprio premieres at Khan next month Paramount parent company of CBS is a distributor it's not lost on Grand that stories birthed in decidedly unglamorous archives end up on red carpets in the French Riviera The Wager out this week has also been optioned for film it would be grand sixth story to hit the big screen do you worry what Hollywood's going to do to your work yes yeah you always worry the truth is you don't have that much control when Hollywood develops your work what is your role once one of your books gets put into development maybe a certain act you want to know about the person they're playing one of the Stars will call you and say tell me more yeah what's an example oh I'll respect privacy but the but you know occasionally some people will reach out to you but you do not seem particularly comfortable talking about the Hollywood angle to this no I don't like that yeah I don't like it I don't like it because I you know it's just a different world you know it's just a different world this is Portsmouth Grand feels much more comfortable transporting himself three centuries back to this world the Wagers set sail here in the British Harbor Town of Portsmouth the entire Expedition may have faded from memory but Grand being Grand he saw references everywhere Anson's name is still remembered and on this Pub we visited the ship Anson a pub named for the squadron's leader George Anson here men were rounded up by the British Navy and pressed into service on the Wagers doomed Mission you could be drinking you know having a beer enjoying yourself the next minute you know you're being put on a little boat that was like a floating jail they would take you out to the ship and it's what made creating unity and cohesion on this Expedition particularly challenging a few hundred yards from the pub we boarded the HMS victory in 18th century warship preserved in the harbor virtually the same model of ship as the wager a thousand tons of Oak and rope where the crew ate and slept next to cannons and after it was fire you'd have this huge Force flying back and you better get out of the way having immersed himself in what he calls the wooden World Grant got to the point he could render a description like this at one point it was so windy and the gusts were so strong that they couldn't fly their sails so the captain orders the men to climb the Mast and to use their bodies as threadbare sales so they are on top of the mass some of them 100 feet in the air in a typhoon you have to understand that the mass are going like this they're almost touching the water and these men are cleaning like spiders wow as Grand breathes fresh life into events from hundreds of years ago you almost wonder if he had climbed the Mast himself he is the first to admit yeah that wouldn't be the case I am not an Explorer like if you compare I mean when I look at these people I mean I would have been the first to die on the island let's be perfectly honest we're gonna play this out what's what's the cause of death oh my cause of death Terror I would have taken one look at those seas and be like I'm out of here this is nuts um so uh you know I I would never have endured anything that these people endure but my own Quest do sometimes get me in places and to do things I otherwise would never do in my ordinary life you would never catch me going to wager Island in a little boat about wager Island marooned and starving The Castaways split into factions including a group in 10 on overthrowing the captain an act of mutiny punishable by Death when two groups of Castaways made it home we won't spoil how they had conflicting accounts of what had happened you know imagine this they get back to England they have survived scurvy multiple typhoons starvation shipwreck and now after all that there's some in to face the court martial and they could be hanged I mean it's just kind of unbelievable unbelievable and complicated Grant solved the puzzle of structuring the wager by telling this Tale on the high seas from three different perspectives allowing readers to decide for themselves where the truth resides and if he fixated on the perfect way to let the book unfold devoted to his own Quest as his characters are to theirs that's what makes it classic Grand what is your obsession with Obsession you know I always thought for a long time that my fascination with obsessed people was because they made the best stories right I mean the ahabs of the world there's a reason why we tell Ahab stories right over time you know I've begun to realize that I might have a little bit more in common with some of these obsesses than I care to admit you call it your fascination with obsessions they're obsessed you're merely fascinating that's what I like to think yes I'm just really fat I'm completely just fashionate but you know the truth is that I don't think you can really be a writer and a researcher and an investigator unless you are at some level obsessed now the last minute of 60 minutes in the mail comments on last Sunday's broadcast the origin of everything showed some of the stunning images captured by the web Space Telescope the resurrection of Notre Dame chronicled the Reconstruction of paris's fire damage medieval Cathedral what was most striking was the enthusiasm and inspiring take shown by the web scientists as well as the devoted people involved with restoring Notre Dame they exemplified the best of our human species but one viewer's inspiration is another viewer's apostasy how disgusting to see a 60-minute segment on The Big Bang Theory on Easter I'm Scott Pelley we'll be back next week with another edition of 60 minutes I'm Nora O'Donnell tomorrow on the CBS evening could how artificial intelligence can instantly spot a gunman in a crowd and keep you safe
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Channel: 60 Minutes
Views: 560,379
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Keywords: 60 Minutes, CBS News, Google, artificial intelligence, ChatGPT, A.I., David Grann, Google CEO
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Length: 43min 8sec (2588 seconds)
Published: Wed Apr 19 2023
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