From Editors, Earth Island Journal <[email protected]>
Subject Watch Your Step
Date January 27, 2024 12:45 AM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
Note to AI titans — move with care, not speed.

News of the world environment

&nbsp;NEWSLETTER | JANUARY 26, 2024

Watch Your Step

On a recent weekend in the Santa Monica Mountains of Southern California, I found myself in the not unwelcome predicament of having lost the trail. I had lucked into an underused corner of state wilderness, on the slope of a small mountain covered in sumac and yucca, and, instead of backtracking, decided I should push uphill. In short order, the slope became steep enough (and my breathing hard enough) that I decided I should probably turn back. As I made my way down, though, I realized I was on a steep, brambly, rocky slope, with no cell reception. A turned ankle here, while not fatal, would be a major inconvenience. I decided a mantra would get me through. “Care, not speed,” I told myself, as I walked mindfully downhill. “Care, not speed.”

The other thing that had been on my mind that day was artificial intelligence. Since the November 2022 release of ChatGPT by OpenAI, AI has become something of a sensation. Media organizations have used it, to varying degrees; it’s come up at work meetings at Earth Island; and I’ve played around with it here and there myself. But now we are on the cusp of an AI explosion, with more and more uses of the technology becoming apparent, and with more and more companies ready to build the chips, data centers, and other infrastructure needed to scale up. (Sam Altman, the CEO of OpenAI, announced early this month that he is looking to raise billions of dollars for an AI chip venture that would include a “global network of fabrication plants.”)

The energy requirements of a fully realized, robust artificial intelligence industry is hard to quantify. In part, that’s because we don’t really know the power demands right now, though we know it is already straining power grids in some places. Experts figure it will be much more than bitcoin mining and crypto currency. That’s to say nothing of the water demands of cooling, or the e-waste these centers will produce. And yet we ought not discount AI entirely from an environmental perspective. After all, machine learning is helping researchers better understand freshwater ecosystems, the culture of killer whales, and more. What’s needed then, is the same approach that got me down that mountain: moving with care in mind, not speed. Alas, this is not the way of Silicon Valley, at least not for now. We can only hope the titans of AI can exercise caution, and, where possible, encourage them to do so.

Stay safe out there, and watch your step.

Brian Calvert
Associate Editor, Earth Island Journal

Photo by Edgar Alfonseca

TOP STORIES

AI and Wild Soundscapes

Researchers are using machines to listen in on what goes on underwater in order to better understand freshwater ecosystems.

READ MORE

The Next Pandemic

Epidemiologists are keeping a close eye on the ongoing bird flu outbreak, which has jumped from birds to wild mammals and is now killing off species across four continents.

LISTEN HERE

People-Powered Journalism

Because of generous reader donations, Earth Island Journal can say things that corporate media won’t say.

Reader support gives us the independence to amplify voices and perspectives that strengthen communities, especially communities that don’t have access to corporate media.

Your support is essential to our long-term success. And with your help, we can reshape the media landscape. Won't you join us today?

I Support Earth Island Journal

Threatened Foodways

Beloved ingredients in traditional Venezuelan gastronomy are getting harder to grow in a climate-altered world.

READ MORE

ICYMI

Bio Breaks

Where to go when you gotta go? Attending to bodily needs like peeing and changing a tampon can be complicated for scientists when out in the field, complications that often exact a heavier toll on female and genderqueer researchers. Some scientists are working to change that.

READ MORE &gt;&gt;
Photo by minnemom

Blending In

Posing for the photography project Eyes as Big as Plates might require spending several hours tummy-down on a hill covered in wildflowers or on a rocky beach caked in clay. But the resulting portraits of people steeped in nature are nothing short of magical.

READ MORE &gt;&gt;

Did a thoughtful friend forward you our newsletter? Keep up with the latest from Earth Island Journal!

SIGN UP TODAY

Follow

Follow

Subscribe

You are receiving this email newsletter because you signed up on our website.
If this newsletter was forwarded to you, you can sign up to the email newsletter here.

Support our work by subscribing to our quarterly print magazine.

Copyright © 2023 Earth Island Journal, All rights reserved.

Our mailing address is:

Earth Island Journal
2150 Allston Way Ste 460
Berkeley, CA 94704-1375

Add us to your address book

Want to change how you receive these emails?
Update your preferences
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis