Clicky

  • Login
  • Register
  • Submit Your Content
  • Contact Us
Saturday, August 23, 2025
World Tribune
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Sports
  • Health
  • Food
Submit
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Sports
  • Health
  • Food
No Result
View All Result
World Tribune
No Result
View All Result

Microsoft AI CEO Mustafa Suleyman warns about AI that appears ‘conscious’

August 22, 2025
in Business
Reading Time: 4 mins read
A A
Microsoft AI CEO Mustafa Suleyman warns about AI that appears ‘conscious’
0
SHARES
ShareShareShareShareShare

Microsoft AI CEO Mustafa Suleyman warns about AI that appears ‘conscious’

Forget doomsday scenarios of AI overthrowing humanity. What keeps Microsoft AI CEO Mustafa Suleyman up at night is concern about AI systems seeming too alive.

READ ALSO

Trump says Intel agreed to give the government 10% of the chipmaker. ‘We do a lot of deals like that. I’ll do more of them’

Ethereum brushes record high after Fed chair says ‘balance of risks’ is shifting

In a new blog post, Suleyman, who also co-founded Google DeepMind, warned the world might be on the brink of AI models that are capable of convincing users that they are thinking, feeling, and having subjective experiences. He calls this concept “Seemingly Conscious AI” (SCAI).

In the near future, Suleyman predicts that models will be able to hold long conversations, remember past interactions, evoke emotional reactions from users, and potentially make convincing claims about having subjective experiences. He noted that these systems could be built with technologies that exist today, paired “with some that will mature over the next 2–3 years.”

The result of these features, he says, will be models that “imitate consciousness in such a convincing way that it would be indistinguishable from a claim that you or I might make to one another about our own consciousness.”

There are already some signs that people are convincing themselves that their AI chatbots are conscious beings and developing relationships with them that may not always be healthy. People are no longer just using chatbots as a tool, they are confiding in them, developing emotional attachments, and in some cases, falling in love. Some people are emotionally invested in particular versions of the AI models, leaving them feeling bereft when the AI model developers bring out new models and discontinue access to those versions. For example, OpenAI’s recent decision to replace GPT-4o with GPT-5 was met with an outcry of shock and anger from some users who had formed emotional relationships with the version of ChatGPT powered by GPT-4o.

This is partly because of how AI tools are designed. The most common way users interact with AI is through chatbots, which mimic natural human conversations and are designed to be agreeable and flattering, sometimes to the point of sycophancy. But it’s also because of how people are using the tech. A recent survey of 6,000 regular AI users from the Harvard Business Review found that “companionship and therapy” was the most common use case.

There has also been a wave of reports of “AI psychosis,” where users begin to experience paranoia or delusions about the systems they interact with. In one example reported by The New York Times, a New York accountant named Eugene Torres experienced a mental health crisis after interacting extensively with ChatGPT, leading to dangerous suggestions, including that he could fly.

“People are interacting with bots masquerading as real people, which are more convincing than ever,” Henrey Ajder, an expert on AI and deepfakes, told Fortune. “So I think the impact will be wide-ranging in terms of who will start believing this.”

Suleyman is concerned that a widespread belief that AI could be conscious will create a new set of ethical dilemmas.

If users begin to treat AI as a friend, a partner, or as a type of being with a subjective experience, they could argue that models deserve rights of their own. Claims that AI models are conscious or sentient could be hard to refute due to the elusive nature of consciousness itself.

One early example of what Suleyman is now calling “Seemingly Conscious AI” came in 2022, when Google engineer Blake Lemoine publicly claimed the company’s unreleased LaMDA chatbot was sentient, reporting it had expressed fear of being turned off and described itself as a person. In response Google placed him on administrative leave and later fired him, stating its internal review found no evidence of consciousness and that his claims were “wholly unfounded.”

“Consciousness is a foundation of human rights, moral and legal,” Suleyman said in a post on X. “Who/what has it is enormously important. Our focus should be on the wellbeing and rights of humans, animals, [and] nature on planet Earth. AI consciousness is a short [and] slippery slope to rights, welfare, citizenship.”

“If those AIs convince other people that they can suffer, or that it has a right to not to be switched off, there will come a time when those people will argue that it deserves protection under law as a pressing moral matter,” he wrote.

Debates around “AI welfare” have already begun. For example, some philosophers, including Jonathan Birch of the London School of Economics, welcomed a recent decision from Anthropic to let its Claude chatbot end “distressing” conversations when users pushed it toward abusive or dangerous requests, saying it could spark a much-needed debate about AI’s potential moral status. Last year, Anthropic also hired Kyle Fish as their first full-time “AI welfare” researcher. He was tasked with investigating whether AI models could have moral significance and what protective interventions might be appropriate.

But while Suleyman called the arrival of Seemingly Conscious AI “inevitable and unwelcome,” neuroscientist and professor of computational Neuroscience Anil Seth attributed the rise of conscious-seeming AI to a “design choice” by tech companies rather than an inevitable step in AI development.

“‘Seemingly-conscious AI is something to avoid.’ I agree,” Seth wrote in an X post. “Conscious-seeming AI is not inevitable. It is a design choice, and one that tech companies need to be very careful about.”

Companies have a commercial motive to develop some of the features that Suleyman is warning of. At Microsoft, Suleyman himself has been overseeing efforts to make the company’s Copilot product more emotionally intelligent. His team has worked on giving the assistant humor and empathy, teaching it to recognize comfort boundaries, and improving its voice with pauses and inflection to make it sound more human.

Suleyman also co-founded Inflection AI in 2022 with the express aim of creating AI systems that foster more natural, emotionally intelligent interactions between humans and machines.

“Ultimately, these companies recognize that people want the most authentic feeling experiences,” Ajder said. “That’s how a company can get customers using their products most frequently. They feel natural and easy. But I think it really comes to a question of whether people are going to start wondering about authenticity.”

Credit: Source link

ShareTweetSendSharePin
Previous Post

Are Britain’s rich packing up? A look at the tax crackdown fears

Next Post

Three things to watch in Jets’ preseason finale

Related Posts

Trump says Intel agreed to give the government 10% of the chipmaker. ‘We do a lot of deals like that. I’ll do more of them’
Business

Trump says Intel agreed to give the government 10% of the chipmaker. ‘We do a lot of deals like that. I’ll do more of them’

August 23, 2025
Ethereum brushes record high after Fed chair says ‘balance of risks’ is shifting
Business

Ethereum brushes record high after Fed chair says ‘balance of risks’ is shifting

August 22, 2025
Cracker Barrel’s first rebrand in nearly 50 years backfired. The company’s stock lost nearly 0 million after introducing a more minimalist look
Business

Cracker Barrel’s first rebrand in nearly 50 years backfired. The company’s stock lost nearly $100 million after introducing a more minimalist look

August 22, 2025
Gen Z want ‘secure’ jobs in healthcare—but this CEO left the industry after realizing he could make millions getting Americans to eat more fruit instead
Business

Gen Z want ‘secure’ jobs in healthcare—but this CEO left the industry after realizing he could make millions getting Americans to eat more fruit instead

August 22, 2025
Trump’s 19-year war on wind power is ‘weaponizing bureaucracy to undermine American energy production,’ critics say
Business

Trump’s 19-year war on wind power is ‘weaponizing bureaucracy to undermine American energy production,’ critics say

August 22, 2025
Hulk Hogan’s death is still under investigation by local police
Business

Hulk Hogan’s death is still under investigation by local police

August 21, 2025
Next Post
Three things to watch in Jets’ preseason finale

Three things to watch in Jets' preseason finale

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

What's New Here!

Kennedy Burke to miss several weeks in latest Liberty injury

Kennedy Burke to miss several weeks in latest Liberty injury

July 30, 2025
Heart of Chornobyl is coming to PS5 on November 20

Heart of Chornobyl is coming to PS5 on November 20

August 21, 2025
China’s Laopu Gold shares fall despite forecast of tripling profits

China’s Laopu Gold shares fall despite forecast of tripling profits

July 28, 2025
Bodybuilding champ Hayley McNeff dead at 37 in ‘unexpected’ tragedy

Bodybuilding champ Hayley McNeff dead at 37 in ‘unexpected’ tragedy

August 14, 2025
Nothing Phone 3 review: Not quite a flagship

Nothing Phone 3 review: Not quite a flagship

August 1, 2025
As Figma goes public, a turning point in the long-awaited IPO market recovery takes shape

As Figma goes public, a turning point in the long-awaited IPO market recovery takes shape

July 31, 2025
Dwight Muhammad Qawi, boxer who went from prison to champion, dies at 72

Dwight Muhammad Qawi, boxer who went from prison to champion, dies at 72

July 28, 2025

About

World Tribune is an online news portal that shares the latest news on world, business, health, tech, sports, and related topics.

Follow us

Recent Posts

  • Forfeit over trans high school volleyball player sparks emotional board meeting as parents clash
  • Liberty can’t afford to keep faltering as they hit final stretch
  • Meta unveil Hypernova smart glasses with display, wristband at Connect
  • Abxylute will sell an absurd 3D handheld from Intel and Tencent Games for “under $1,700”

Newslatter

Loading
  • Submit Your Content
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • DMCA

© 2024 World Tribune - All Rights Reserved!

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Sports
  • Health
  • Food

© 2024 World Tribune - All Rights Reserved!

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In