tv DW News Asia Deutsche Welle November 2, 2023 6:15pm-6:31pm CET
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the more foreign nationals have left the causes through the grass of crossing today around 7500 are expected to leave over the next of 2 weeks. the deal arranged by captain ferguson has that dw business, the in just a moment. and now the best of the top of the people in trucks insured was trying to feed the city center the straight screen, the around the world more than 150000000 people us
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we of mine because no one should have to make up your own mind dw may 4 mines. the breakthrough in the quest to regulate artificial intelligence. here at some 28 countries agreed to work together to protect you monitoring potential harms post quite a rapidly if all thanks. technology and albanians, medical graduates are furious about. the government's planned to stop them from leaving the country. this is the w business on tape ferguson. and thanks for joining me. a rare sign of unity in a fractured world. near to leaders from china,
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the united states and europe say they work together to manage the risks posed by artificial intelligence. the so called blatchley decoration is the main outcome of the world. first, ever a i safety conference, taking place in london. it was a summit with a single, overarching goal to agree on a way to manage on invest 3 that is developing at break neck speed in the end. a brack jewels, a kind of commitment to work together for leaders. the biggest challenge protecting society from a i spent just why not damaging innovation. we need to ensure intelligence. otherwise we move the business. um, what i appreciate a risk based approach on regulation. we should regulate the necessary points. we need a i, and we need to trustworthy i from. meanwhile,
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you cater preventatives trust. the importance of coming together as we have laid the foundations for addressing one of the greatest challenges of our generation, the emerging risk of frontier, despite our varying perspectives. we've managed to reach a level of agreement that would not have been realized without convening today. i think stop power to the rent tech feel now, you don't must, because among the 3 inside is advocating for international collaboration. as part of the son among people and me, i feel that the that, that the comic was sort of jumped the gun on the rules before. but knowing what to do. and i think i think that's unlikely to happen to be good. what we really mean for here is to establish a framework for insights. so there's at least a 3rd party referee, an independent referee that can observe what leading companies are doing. even china and the us often at odds have agree 5. and when it comes to a,
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i together is better than going it alone. civil society and the private sector are corresponding tickets. mazda is that specially park where she's been talking to. you also offend you. considered one of the godfather is of a i. c. has previously described the emotions of the a pioneer in the industry to walk, the scientists who develop the atomic bomb must have stopped. she asked him what he feared if at the possible direction a i could take in the coming years as well. i think in the coming years, what we have to really worried about is how these powerful systems, especially they're coming generations, could be misused by bad actors, terrace criminals and could be supplies that democracies could be use for fraud. and could be used to creates more easily than before. chemical weapons, biological weapons. this sort of thing is, is fairly serious and,
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and we need to quickly act because maybe the next generation that's coming in 24 could already be dangerous. we have to make sure that these systems are secured, and that is not going to be easy for bad actors to take advantage of them. is there a particular scenario, an example that you could give us that you would think is particularly worrying? well, cyber security is a, is a good example. there's being a steady progress of the system in their ability to program like like human programmers and right now already large fraction of the code on, on the get how that is generated by a i systems. but it's very likely that the next generations will be even more powerful. we've seen in other settings that the uh, successive versions of a i, systems are being like, gradually getting better at different tasks, like passing bar exams and things like that. and. and so if this happens for
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programming and the systems end up stronger, they're in our best programmers in terms of cyber security. best could be an issue . we're not prepared for these kinds of, of attacks. but even with the current systems, the, the, the, the, can help and say bad actors who are not the experts to, to do more easily, a job that, that experts could do. and that's already an issue. when did you become particularly concerned? was it just a moment where you saw it? hang on? this is really, really dangerous. well it's, it's really the arrival of chat g p t that has forced me into thinking that what i thought in terms of incompatibility would come, maybe in decades or centuries actually may come a lot sooner. and that the consequences if either this is miss use or we lose control of the systems. now the words the, they don't behave according to our instructions. these are possibilities that
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scientists have been talking about before. but i think now we are at the kind of costs where this could happen pretty soon, and we need to start preparing governments need to start preparing for this, trying to minimize those risks. and i'll call them is doing enough. i mean a declaration and acknowledging the business one thing, but actually what's really needed. yes. what's really needed is actually pretty straightforward to express what we want to make sure it's not the i systems we build our sites. and so the companies that are building the systems should have to demonstrate to regulators and civil society that their systems are safe. that so that scientists can check the logic of their arguments, the soundness of the evidence that they bring. and only if those systems are safe according to the different aspects that government scared about should the
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systems be actually built and deployed? so yeah, so eventually are there and it's to albania know where the government has introduced a new law that will force recent medical. glad to us to work in their home country for up to 5 years or be forced to pay back their state fund the tuition fees if they leave. as one of your poorest countries, the nation comp compete with the medical salaries that the likes of germany are easily where many newly qualified doctors go to work, say to say, students in the country are far from healthy. as these medical students are protesting against a new law in t, ron of the capital of albania, according to the new legislation, after completing the studies they required work. and that'll be in your for 5 years or have to pay for their studies if they decide to go abroad after graduation. that's the name slightly closer to this, not to be unconstitutional. while writing students has freedom to choose where they
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want to work or vending and your doctors are in high demand. nearby countries such as italy and germany activities accrued to medical professionals from here. in recent years, the 1000 doctors and 16000 nurses have left the country. the state health care system is suffering. albania, now has one of the lowest doctor to patient ratios in europe. wouldn't the need to stop the flight of doctors from i'll be good, especially young doctors who leave the country off to graduate jake. that is a really big problem. we can get them well trained professionals often pursue better job opportunities elsewhere as they are enticed by better working conditions and highest salaries compared to alabama. yeah, that's what i do. show me personally, i'm torn between 2 levels. say, i'm going abroad with specialized after completing my studies, or staying in albania, optimize that, that is here. we're going to do the rest of that for the team direct and most of
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them are going receiving a state funded education and then leaving the country is no longer acceptable according to the government. however, many students feel that mandatory requirement to stay in the country is limiting the future prospect still more by this annoying that by honest, most months the vice president of the junior dr is association of europe. as your organization represents the interest of 300 size and european to new doctors, what is your response to the legislation pulled in by the operating government? so. busy other one and so i think this, this kind of natural response to model sufficient is that we really not support this action. however, it's supposed to be surprising because we believe that such actions but by individual confuses more or less. trying to solve a multi regional problem when they're all and just only addressing symptoms rather than from the amount to some of the mental problems. that's why they move out. the
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medical professionals is one of the key fundamental dollars to organization. and then we truly believe that this is the right the right way to address this, this problem that the doctor's aim to kind of leave their country. however, we also highly appreciate that this is way way, way of large of challenge in the hold your can be genetic because identifying the cells only, but also level it. so you can imagine that medical workforce is a crisis. and this whole for the problem is that in crisis mode and, and we believe that um, this whole thing needs to be also addressed by the country that you mentioned in your, to your board, the country that uh which our country is usually not sufficient in the uh, plan or train their own doctors. that's why they seek for, for uh, the medical professionals in, in, in other countries to compensate their own insufficiencies. and we believe it's got an address. these problems needs to be, you know,
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address the address of fundamentally and then systemically. that's why w h o region just to be some of the, uh, agreed on an, on the resolution that 553 countries voted for on how to address medical workforce issues. we have their condition as well, kind of identified the numerous fundamental problems like uh, you know, uh, lack of financing of healthcare workforce and a lack of understanding that medical workforce conditions where they work on the fundamental problems rather than, you know, it's, that's, that's the right way to use to go there and look for for uh baptist elsewhere. so i think that needs to be worked together and then more comprehensive way. okay. there is a lot to think about their answers, msf, vice president of the junior doctors association of europe. thank you. very much thank. ready a and a reminder of the top business story we're following for you this. our world leaders from 28 countries have agreed on
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