-
Tuchel refuses to dampen England World Cup expectations
-
US coach dismisses European jinx ahead of Bosnia clash
-
Mbappe hails unity as France rally around Deschamps at World Cup
-
World Bank to phase out lending to China by 2031
-
Mbappe fires France into World Cup last 16, Norway advance
-
Mbappe scores twice as France breeze past Sweden into World Cup last 16
-
Belgium fully fit ahead of Senegal tie at World Cup, says Garcia
-
No corn dogs? Trump's 'Great American State Fair' threatens to be a flop
-
Tepid outlook weighs on Nike despite tariff refund boost
-
Haaland hailed as 'greatest' after more World Cup heroics
-
DR Congo have 'nothing to lose' in England World Cup clash
-
Koeman steps down as Netherlands coach after World Cup exit
-
Valiant Serena beaten on Wimbledon return, Swiatek survives scare
-
Nasdaq ends best quarter in 6 years as yen extends drop against dollar
-
Serena beaten at Wimbledon in first singles match in four years
-
Zverev says Wimbledon hopes 'about me' despite open draw
-
Dutch football chiefs condemn online racism after World Cup exit
-
Lionel Scaloni: Argentina's mastermind marks 100 games in charge
-
Police hunt for Monaco bomber after Ukraine-born tycoon wounded
-
Mourinho's Real Madrid host Real Sociedad in La Liga opener
-
CIA boss compares cutting-edge AI to nuclear weapons
-
Football brings joy to Venezuelan kids displaced by quakes
-
'Any team can beat you', warns Ruiz as Spain seek end to World Cup woe
-
Haaland fires Norway into last 16 as France, Mexico look to advance
-
Venezuela quake survivors seek food, shelter as toll rises to nearly 2,000
-
Merkel unveils official portrait for German chancellery
-
Haaland scores winner to send Norway into last-16 Brazil clash
-
Canada crews battle northern wildfire after crash kills 3
-
US Treasury sanctions target alleged drug cartel-linked fuel smuggling ring
-
Portugal's Silva bides his time after being benched at World Cup
-
LeBron James to leave Lakers to play 24th NBA season
-
US stars relish soccer's primetime moment against Bosnia
-
Zverev wins in four sets to reach Wimbledon round two
-
Lampard extends Coventry stay after promotion to Premier League
-
Grimaldo realises goal of Atletico Madrid move from Leverkusen
-
Djokovic, Sinner aim to step up Wimbledon title chase
-
US Supreme Court lifts campaign spending restrictions ahead of midterms
-
Brook ready for "great honour" of succeeding Stokes as Test skipper
-
LeBron James to leave Lakers to play 24th NBA career
-
Taps run dry in Hungarian village as heatwave bites
-
Tens of millions swelter as heat wave blasts US
-
Venezuela quake survivors seek food, shelter amid risk of disease outbreaks
-
US Supreme Court rejects Trump bid to limit birthright citizenship
-
LeBron James to leave Lakers, continue NBA career - media reports
-
Gardner stars as Australia thrash the West Indies in Women's T20 World Cup semi-final
-
'Where is she?' The desperate search for Venezuela's missing
-
Former Barca teen star Fati seals permanent Monaco switch
-
No business as usual after shock World Cup exit, say German FA
-
German rail regulator backs Italian firm in competition spat
-
Pope appeals to Catholic traditionalists to avoid schism
'Terrible' AI has given tech an existential headache: activist
Technology firms are ceaselessly promoting new AI products, but climate activist Sage Lenier says AI is useless, unsustainable and has given the industry an existential problem.
"AI has no benefit to society," she told AFP on the sidelines of the Web Summit tech conference in Lisbon.
The CEOs who have become enraptured by a "useless" product class have smashed the idea of tech as an essential utility.
"And now they have an existential problem," she said.
Lenier first garnered attention as a 19-year-old student in 2018 when she founded and led a course at the University of California, Berkeley, titled "Solutions for a Sustainable & Just Future".
She has said students like her were sick of the kind of climate education that offered no hope -- she wanted to focus on the solutions not just the problems.
Hundreds joined the course at Berkeley over the years and eventually hundreds more online, and Lenier has since built a nonprofit around it and now hopes to launch a documentary series.
The California native, who now lives in New York, said she was largely positive about tech.
But her climate focus makes her an outsider at the Web Summit -- "I'll keep coming if they want me to shout at them," she said.
Last year, she told the crowd: "Some of you could be considered directly responsible for architecting the ecological crisis."
She implored tech bosses to embrace the circular economy, which relies on reusing and recycling rather than creating products that end up being junked.
But one year on, Microsoft, Google and others have unleashed an endless stream of energy-gobbling AI products.
They have rushed to reopen nuclear plants, pledged to build many more data centres -- and crashed through their climate targets.
- 'Waste of emissions' -
Yet AI, Lenier said, "has a million negatives".
"It is terrible for the planet. It's terrible for every community that you're running data centres in. And it's useless. I think it's just a waste of emissions," she said.
She points out that it was not always this way in the tech sector.
"It was the only industry, at least in America, where for years and years they tried to portray themselves as clean, green and pro-future," she said.
"Bill Gates has written multiple books on climate change."
The CEOs really want the image, and succeeded in dodging the kind of scrutiny put on the fashion and automotive industries.
"Then the moment they got an opportunity, with AI, to increase shareholder returns... every single one of them slammed the red button," she said.
- 'So bad so fast' -
Although Lenier came to prominence by focusing attention on the solutions to the climate crisis, she sees a bleak future coming within a generation.
"Shit is going to get so bad so fast. The food chain is going to break. We will see mass malnourishment if not mass starvation," she said.
The power grid, too, will break down.
Against this background, products like cars and new clothes are superfluous.
"You can't have cars in the long term. It doesn't matter if they're electric or not. They're unsustainable," she said.
"We can't be producing 80 billion garments of clothing a year in a low carbon future."
A year ago, she said she might have argued that tech was something different.
"It's a piece of our infrastructure, we built our societies around it," she said.
But with AI, "they've given themselves their own little fast fashion".
F.Fehr--VB