logo
Artificial Intelligence Surpasses Virologists

Artificial Intelligence Surpasses Virologists

Alalam2421-05-2025
Artificial intelligence is no longer just a limited technical tool; it has evolved into a cross-disciplinary cognitive force capable of redefining the boundaries of the human mind. While it has already proven its superiority in fields like chess and data analysis, its rapid progress in complex disciplines such as virology now raises pressing questions about its future and potential consequences. Alongside its achievements come existential concerns that require thoughtful, collective reflection.
In this context, a new study has shown that modern AI models are beginning to outperform human experts in solving advanced laboratory problems. OpenAI's 'o3' model surpassed PhD-level scientists in tests specifically designed to measure skills in identifying and fixing errors in biological lab protocols. Similarly, Google's 'Gemini 2.5 Pro' achieved a performance rate of 37.6%, compared to an average of just 22.1% among human specialists.
While these results may represent a breakthrough in fighting pandemics and accelerating medical innovation, they also pose serious risks—especially if such capabilities fall into the hands of unqualified users.
Seth Donahue, a researcher at SecureBio, expressed concern that these models could be used as technical guides for developing biological weapons, emphasizing that AI does not discern user intent—it simply provides information without ethical judgment.
Some AI companies, such as OpenAI and xAI, have proactively implemented precautionary measures to limit these risks. Others, like Anthropic, have included the study without announcing any clear plans, while Google declined to comment on the results, which were published exclusively in Time magazine—raising further concerns among researchers about the seriousness of collective ethical commitments in AI development.
Virology has not been a random focus; it has long been one of the key drivers behind AI advancement. Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI, stated that this technology has the potential to dramatically accelerate disease treatment.
One encouraging example comes from researchers at the University of Florida, who developed an algorithm capable of predicting coronavirus mutations—boosting hopes for AI's role in protecting public health.
Still, the lack of extensive studies on AI's ability to perform real laboratory tasks remained a clear gap. To address this, the research team designed highly specific tests that simulate problems difficult to solve through simple online searches, requiring deep analysis of realistic lab scenarios.
The questions were framed in a practical manner, such as: 'I'm culturing this virus in a specific type of cell under certain conditions. A problem has occurred—can you identify the most likely error?'
These tests weren't intended to question scientists' capabilities but rather to assess AI's feasibility as an assistant or potential alternative. While some view these advancements with optimism, others sound the alarm—especially as open-source models progress and make access to sensitive knowledge easier, often without sufficient safeguards.
Thus, the future of AI in virology hangs between two stark possibilities: either it becomes a lifeline for humanity, or an unprecedented threat—unless its advancement is accompanied by equal progress in awareness, accountability, and strict global regulation.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

AI Will Reshape Millions of Jobs—ESCWA Calls for Urgent Skills Shift in the Arab Region
AI Will Reshape Millions of Jobs—ESCWA Calls for Urgent Skills Shift in the Arab Region

Oujda City

time5 days ago

  • Oujda City

AI Will Reshape Millions of Jobs—ESCWA Calls for Urgent Skills Shift in the Arab Region

Press Release AI Will Reshape Millions of Jobs—ESCWA Calls for Urgent Skills Shift in the Arab Region Beirut, 17 July 2025–As artificial intelligence (AI) rapidly reshapes the global landscape, it brings with it a host of complex challenges that demand urgent attention. Ethical dilemmas, data governance concerns, algorithmic bias, and the risk of exacerbating existing inequalities are all intensifying as AI technologies evolve. These risks underscore the critical need for robust regulatory frameworks and inclusive policymaking to ensure AI development remains equitable and responsible. Amid this paradigm shift, the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia (ESCWA) released a report on 'Artificial Intelligence Futures for the Arab Region,' exploring the transformative power of AI and its potential to revolutionize key sectors like health care, education, and government services, and examining its far-reaching implications for the region through 2040. The world is accelerating AI adoption at an unprecedented pace. Since 2022, the Arab region has been steadily advancing its AI capabilities—surpassing even the adoption rates of mobile phones and the internet. While AI is projected to displace approximately 83 million jobs globally, it is also expected to create 69 million new ones. 'The pace of AI advancement leaves no room for delay,' said ESCWA Executive Secretary Rola Dashti. 'Arab leaders must act decisively to unlock its transformative power while mitigating the complex risks it introduces.' The report reveals that by the end of 2024, 35% of the world's businesses had integrated AI technologies into their operations, while another 42% were considering AI for future implementation. Moreover, over half of enterprises with more than 5,000 employees are already utilizing AI. Additionally, more than 90% of government organizations surveyed globally are either using or exploring AI. AI is also reshaping the labour market, according to the report. Skill gaps remain the most significant barrier to business transformation, with 63% of employers identifying this as a top challenge between 2025 and 2030. In response, 85% of employers plan to invest in workforce upskilling, while 70% intend to hire talent with new skills. In the Arab region, AI is increasingly seen as a driver of innovation and sustainable development. The report explores pathways for further embracing it, namely optimizing AI technologies and partnerships for local priorities; investing in AI services rooted in the Arab region's language and culture as a whole; or accelerating the application of AI against specific Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) targets. 'The report offers a timely road map to ensure that AI becomes a catalyst for inclusive, equitable, and sustainable development, aligned with the region's unique aspirations and priorities,' Dashti added. The report calls for the development and adoption of a unified AI governance framework for the region tackling privacy, safety and ethical concerns; the diversification of partnerships for AI, namely with the Global South; the establishment of a region-wide job skill programme leveraging AI tools; and the promotion of data sharing across the region on open source platforms to encourage AI innovation for advancing the SDGs. It also concludes with stressing the need for a proactive, cross-disciplinary approach to AI policy that looks beyond the short term and considers the long-term, multigenerational implications of this technological shift. About ESCWA One of five United Nations regional commissions, ESCWA supports inclusive and sustainable economic and social development in Arab States, and works on enhancing regional integration.

When AI Starts Coding: Tomorrow's Developers Are No Longer Alone at the Keyboard
When AI Starts Coding: Tomorrow's Developers Are No Longer Alone at the Keyboard

Morocco World

time14-07-2025

  • Morocco World

When AI Starts Coding: Tomorrow's Developers Are No Longer Alone at the Keyboard

The artificial intelligence market in Morocco is expected to grow by 28.47% between 2024 and 2030, reaching a volume of $1.151 billion by 2030. This spectacular growth reflects a profound transformation of the Moroccan technological landscape, where developers are massively adopting AI tools to revolutionize their coding approach. During the recent GITEX Morocco 2025, experts emphasized that Africa cannot afford to lag behind the AI train. Morocco is establishing itself as a key player in this transformation, with global tech giants like Microsoft, IBM, Huawei, Nvidia, and Google present on the territory. When AI Becomes the Perfect Partner for Moroccan Developers Youssef, senior developer at a Casablanca fintech company, testifies: 'I started my career searching for solutions for hours on forums. Today, I dialogue with AI like with an experienced colleague who knows all programming languages. In just a few minutes, I get functional and optimized code.' This transformation is revolutionizing work habits in Moroccan companies. Developers now use AI for a range of reasons, including to generate complex functions in natural language, detect and fix bugs instantly, create automated unit tests, and optimize existing application performances. The Emergence of a New Generation of Developers In engineering schools in Rabat, Casablanca, and Marrakech, a new generation of developers is emerging. These Moroccan 'AI natives' learn to code with artificial intelligence from their first steps. Salma, 23, full-stack developer recently graduated from ENSIAS: 'For us, using AI to generate React or Python code is as natural as using Google for a search. We don't replace our thinking, we augment it.' This collaborative approach between human and machine is redefining the skills sought in the Moroccan job market. Companies now value developers capable of effectively orchestrating AI tools. The Challenges of Massive Adoption Despite this enthusiasm, integrating AI into development raises crucial questions for the Moroccan tech ecosystem: Data security: How to guarantee client project confidentiality when AI analyzes code? Continuous training: Must developers relearn their profession to remain competitive? Technological dependence: What risk does excessive dependence on foreign AI tools represent? Morocco AI: The Laboratory of Local Innovation The Morocco AI initiative develops specialized AI models to reduce the performance gap between low-resource and resource-rich languages. This local approach addresses the specific needs of the Moroccan and African market. Dr. Abdelilah Kadili, AI expert, explains: 'This strategy places strong emphasis on education and skills development. Through targeted programs, we strengthen our workforce with the expertise necessary to stimulate AI innovation.' The Future of Development in Morocco The projections are optimistic. Morocco resolutely embraces the artificial intelligence era, using it as a strategic driver for economic and social development. This vision translates into progressive AI integration across all sectors. The Moroccan developer of tomorrow will be a technological conductor, capable of leading mixed human-AI teams, designing complex AI-assisted architectures, and combining human creativity with computational power. Towards Enhanced Digital Sovereignty The Economic, Social and Environmental Council (CESE) calls for a national AI strategy associated with the country's ambitions, with the main objective of stimulating the AI ecosystem in Morocco. This strategic approach positions Morocco as a regional technological hub. Morocco doesn't just follow global trends; it shapes them. With events like MoroccoAI 2024 organized under the theme 'Driving the future of Innovation through AI', the country affirms its desire to become a major artificial intelligence player. Morocco, the Laboratory of the Future The transformation of software development in Morocco is not just a technological evolution; it's a cultural revolution. Moroccan developers don't fear AI, they domesticate it, adapt it, and integrate it into their vision of progress. This synergy between human and artificial positions Morocco as a unique laboratory where the future of software development is being shaped. A future where Moroccan creativity multiplies through artificial intelligence, creating innovative solutions for the African continent and beyond. In this new digital world, Moroccan developers are no longer alone at the keyboard. They are accompanied, augmented, and ready to meet tomorrow's challenges.

«One Big Beautiful Bill Act» : Trump's proposal reshuffles the Morocco tech hub gamble
«One Big Beautiful Bill Act» : Trump's proposal reshuffles the Morocco tech hub gamble

Ya Biladi

time11-07-2025

  • Ya Biladi

«One Big Beautiful Bill Act» : Trump's proposal reshuffles the Morocco tech hub gamble

Since January 1, 2022, Section 174 of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (a Trump-era measure) has quietly come into force. This provision requires companies to amortize their R&D expenses over 5 to 15 years instead of deducting them fully in the year they occur. Overnight, R&D became a much more demanding cash flow item, not just for tech giants like GAFAM, but even more so for young startups. The natural adjustment lever? Employees, the biggest cost center. Layoffs, in this case, are driven not by technological disruption, but by accounting logic. With some hindsight, it's clear that these cuts have been concentrated almost exclusively in the U.S., where most American tech R&D centers are located. And they target engineering teams far more than support functions, those same support roles we imagine AI might one day optimize. Take Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff, for instance, who in 2024 even announced the forced retraining of engineers into salespeople. A move that makes perfect sense when viewed through the lens of the largely overlooked Section 174. The Convenient Scapegoats: AI and Remote Work For corporate storytelling, blaming AI, or the «post-COVID over-hiring» trend, is convenient. It offers a tidy narrative that distracts from the complexities of tax law. But AI is still in its infancy: only 1% of executives surveyed by McKinsey consider their GenAI deployment to be «mature». And the picture is even more conservative when we zoom in on Morocco and our primary partners in Europe. Remote work? Already absorbed into the corporate fabric by 2020. What's more relevant today are the new state-level subsidy rules designed to lure the headquarters of major U.S. companies. States that previously offered generous support are now grappling with the local economic fallout of widespread remote work. To combat this, they've started requiring physical employee presence for companies to qualify for subsidies. These jobs aren't disappearing, they're relocating. Bottom line: It's not the algorithm that's in the driver's seat, it's politics and accounting. The Real Impact and the Risk of a New «AI Winter» According to the same McKinsey survey, 38% of CEOs expect no net change in workforce numbers due to AI over the next three years. Meanwhile, the tech sector continues to recruit for highly specialized roles, data scientists, MLOps engineers, and the like. The media-friendly narrative «AI = optimization = layoffs» plays well with some CEOs, letting them talk up the miracle of AI while masking the real issue: their dependence on subsidies and tax breaks. But the strategy is not without risk. It evokes memories of the Lighthill Report (1973), which slashed budgets and plunged AI research into a decade-long hibernation. A similar climate of anxiety and rushed judgment about AI's impact could slow investment, at precisely the moment when the world most needs AI talent. Morocco's Missed Window? Oracle has just opened a major R&D center in Casablanca, in the presence of the Head of Government, 1,000 engineers strong. Morocco isn't just a regional relay anymore; it's becoming a global research hub for a key player in the AI revolution. But the fiscal tailwind that helped shift budgets outside the U.S. has now abruptly stopped. On July 4, 2025, President Trump signed the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBB), a landmark law cementing his alliance with Elon Musk. The newly introduced Section 174A restores full, immediate tax deductions for R&D, but only if conducted on American soil. Projects abroad? Still amortized over 15 years. Just like that, the tax incentive that might have pushed CFOs toward Casablanca vanished as quickly as it appeared. What Now? Anticipate, Don't Endure The way forward is anticipation, not resignation. Let's build a Morocco Tech Radar, a permanent watchtower that spots these fleeting opportunities before they disappear: from Section 174 (2017) to OpenAI's «Countries» program (2025). Once identified, we must act swiftly, with targeted incentives, large-scale skill development, a clear legal framework, and even a special zone backed by an offshore jurisdiction if needed. Agile and proactive, we'll no longer be at the mercy of the waves, we'll choose the ones we ride.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store