Elon Musk says that the largest investment of artificial intelligence will be human robots
- Elon Musk said in a modern committee that human robots will open “semi -Invinite” services.
- Tesla CEO has not been sure whether the money would have a great value by that time.
- Tesla begins the production of its Optimus robots in 2025, according to Musk.
Tesla Elusk CEO in an interview with him with the Global Government Summit in Dubai said the economic returns of artificial intelligence investments will appear in human robots.
Speaking to the Minister of Artificial Intelligence in the United Arab Emirates, Omar Sultan Alawam, in a video call on Thursday, Musk said that human robots and deep intelligence will open the capabilities of the global economy by providing “semi -oriental products and services.
Musk was answering children about the place that he believed to be “the largest economic returns” for artificial intelligence models would come from them.
“You can produce any product and provide any service,” Musk said of human robots. “There is no limit to the economy at that point. You can do anything.”
The billionaire said that the money may not bear a great value by that time.
“Will the money be meaningful? He wants,” he said.
Ascending on human robots on human robots is not surprising. The CEO said during a profit call on January 29 that Tesla will start producing “several thousand robots” at the end of 2025.
He said during the call: “It is one of those things that I think, in the long run, has the ability to be a $ 10 trillion in revenue,” he said during the call. “Like, it’s already banana.”
Musk is known to go beyond the dates of delivery dates, including on Cybercab robots. The CEO once said that Tesla will have a million robots on the road by 2020. Then in 2022, this schedule pushed until 2023.
While Musk said in the company Latest profit call Tesla will start providing self -ruling horseback services in Austin by June, will not be Cybercab, the TESLA dedicated Robotaxi. Start producing the size until 2026, according to its profits.
Tesla is not the only player to bet on human robots.
Meta creates a group of products that focus on robots and announced on Friday that the former CEO Marc Marc Whitten will lead the team, according to an internal memo obtained by Business Insider.
A Tesla spokesman did not respond to a request for comment.