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Searching for Cancer Cures Is Part of Google's AI Story. It Needs to Be More Than a Footnote

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Why This Matters

This article highlights Google's efforts to leverage AI for critical global issues like climate change and healthcare, emphasizing the importance of aligning AI development with societal benefits. Recognizing these noble applications can help improve public perception and trust in AI technology, especially amid widespread skepticism.

Key Takeaways

One hour and 45 minutes into the Google I/O keynote, I suddenly sat upright in my chair. The CEO of Google DeepMind and Alphabet's Isomorphic Labs, Demis Hassabis, was on stage talking about Gemini for Science and the work his team is doing to solve meaty, difficult real-world problems with AI. It's important, compelling stuff, and I was hooked immediately.

In case you didn't stick around until the very end, here's what you need to know: Google is predicting the path of hurricanes to put early-warning systems in place at a time when climate change is making extreme weather more unpredictable than ever -- and as the government is defunding National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. It's creating digital twins of the planet to tackle deforestation and food insecurity. It's in the preclinical stage for multiple medical projects, including treatments for immune disorders and cancer.

Amid the ongoing slopification of the internet and the looming threat of mass unemployment, it's easy to forget that there are a handful of indisputably noble reasons for AI to exist. None are obviously profitable, of course, but surely they deserve to be more than a mere footnote in Google's I/O agenda?

Perhaps this last-minute mention of Gemini for Science was a Hail Mary attempt to leave things on a positive note after over 100 minutes of talk about incremental improvements to AI models that the wider world never asked for. But more likely, it simply speaks to how Google (de)values this work in comparison to the search, shopping and generative AI tools that occupied the bulk of the keynote.

Google is mapping the path of hurricanes to keep people safe. Google/Screenshot by CNET

It feels like an oversight -- not only because this work should be a moral priority, but also because AI isn't exactly universally beloved outside Silicon Valley. Showing how it can genuinely benefit humanity could provide a sorely needed reputational boost for this technology, which many people are skeptical of and even, justifiably, fear.

Google wants people to be excited about AI that can plan a block party for them, and it's a big ask. Many of us are more worried about the potential for our block parties to be ruined by an AI data center being built in our neighborhoods.

AI that's good for humanity

But do you know what might actually get people excited about AI? The potential of curing, or at least more effectively treating, cancer.

I've read endless interviews with Hassabis over the years and have seen him speak at events. It's clear that pursuing AI for its medical benefits is where his real passion lies.

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