How China could beat the West in the deadly race for AI weapons

#artificialintelligence 

Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA) Air Force officers march past Tiananmen Square in a show of military strength Last month, some of the biggest names in technology signed a pledge promising not to develop lethal autonomous weapons. Coming just after the recent employee-led protest over Google's Project Maven, some have praised these initiatives as ethical and moral victories. For Sandro Gaycken, a senior advisor to Nato, such initiatives are supremely complacent and risk granting authoritarian states an asymmetric advantage. "These naive hippy developers from Silicon Valley don't understand – the CIA should force them," says Gaycken, founder of the digital society institute at ESMT, a Berlin-based business school. Gaycken's hard advice reveals a schism emerging in the future development of AI for military purposes. On the one side are those that believe pursuing the development of military AI will lead to an unstoppable arms race. On the other side, people like Gaycken believe the AI arms-race has already begun.

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