Skip to main contentSkip to navigationSkip to navigation
Prof Jim Al-Khalili with a model of the human brain.
For his BBC4 show The Joy of AI, Prof Jim Al-Khalili presents an inspiration for AI: the human brain. Photograph: Jodie Adams/BBC/Wingspan Productions/Jodie Adams
For his BBC4 show The Joy of AI, Prof Jim Al-Khalili presents an inspiration for AI: the human brain. Photograph: Jodie Adams/BBC/Wingspan Productions/Jodie Adams

AI revolution 'at risk of being stifled in UK by fear-driven backlash'

This article is more than 5 years old

Without greater transparency AI’s full potential may not be realised, warns British Science Association’s incoming president

Artificial intelligence promises an even bigger revolution than the internet yet could be stifled in the UK by a fear-driven public backlash, according to a leading scientist and broadcaster.

Prof Jim Al-Khalili, a physicist and the incoming president of the British Science Association, warns that without greater transparency and public engagement the full potential of AI may not be realised.

In the absence of concerted action by academics, the government and industry, the rapidly advancing technology could end up "uncontrolled and unregulated" in the hands of a few supremely powerful companies, he says.

Previewing his presidential address at this year's British Science festival in Hull, which begins next week, Khalili spoke of the dream and dangers of AI.

He said the UK was at the forefront of the technology, which is predicted to contribute up to $15tn (£11.7tn) to the global economy by 2030.

But he said there was a risk of AI going the same way as genetic modification and being seen as frightening and sinister by the public, and as a poisoned chalice by politicians.

Khalili said: "There's a real danger of a public backlash against AI, potentially similar to the one we had with GM back in the early days of the millennium.

"If the public become disengaged our leaders will see it as less of a priority. Regulations will need to be in place and they may come too late. At the very least, this will result in the technology not being used to its full potential in the public sector, potentially leading to an increase in inequality in society."

He wants to see AI included in the school curriculum, even though that would be like "shifting a giant tanker in the middle of the ocean", and the focus of myth-dispelling public education programmes.

While AI was being seen as science fiction, it was already becoming part of daily life, Khalili said, pointing out that it manifests itself in virtual assistants such as Siri and Alexa as well as in the "almost psychic awareness" of Google, Facebook and Amazon.

In future, the technology could completely reshape society, he predicted.

"AI is going to transform our lives in the coming decades even more than the internet has over the last few decades," said Khalili. "Let's make sure we're ready for it."

Most viewed

Most viewed