AI superintelligence is not a looming threat

Figure The founder partner and CEO Dylan Field said on Thursday that artificial intelligence did not pose a serious threat to the future of the design software company on the verge of public markets.
Field, CNBC’nin “Squawk Box” said in a statement, “This moment, if you are full of singularity, go, ‘hey, super, super, super-suppersance comes and can do things that no person can do.” He said. “I find it hard to believe that we will really approach it quickly right now, but that doesn’t mean it is out of painting.”
Figma will start trading on the New York Stock Exchange under the “fig” symbol on Thursday. Last week, the company predicted that it would pricing the shares between $ 25 and 28, and on Wednesday, a share on this range was priced to $ 33.
This year’s CNBC Disruptor 50 list is 45th ranking figma bid values $ 19.3 billion.
The company had to be purchased Adobe For $ 20 billion, but the agreement was scrapped in December 2023 after the regulators appealed.
“Super-Supersteligence”, a kind of artificial intelligence that can be stronger than the human brain, has become a growing focus among technology companies.
Field, CNBC, Andrew Ross Sorkin, the company’s “complex” graphics engine and other aspects of the other aspects of the Superintelligige, he said.
Field, “I think this is not the things you can learn by looking at the code on the internet and various places.” He said. “This is not part of the pre -training data mixture. I believe it is very difficult to do it on a scale.”
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg declared that in a Wednesday note that technology will serve as a tool for “individual strengthening” on automation and productivity, it became particularly vocal about the super -Supeteringans potential.
Meta recently created a laboratory to follow Super -Superingance, and Zuckerberg poured billions of dollars to build a list of best AI talent.
– Jordan Nove from CNBC contributed to this story.