binding rule
'Killer robots': Will they be banned?
These aren't the drones that deliver your online order. Loaded with cameras, sensors, and explosives, their mission is to drive themselves to a target with an algorithm in the driver's seat. They destroy themselves along with the target, leaving behind just a pile of electronic detritus. Increasingly, these sorts of weapons are the stuff of a manufacturer's promotional materials rather than science fiction movies. From today, a United Nations conference of 80 countries gathers in Geneva to debate whether to ban them or at least regulate them more strictly.
Out-of-control Congress and Fed need binding rules
Fox Business Flash top headlines are here. Check out what's clicking on FoxBusiness.com. "May you live in interesting times," goes the old Chinese curse. When it comes to economics, "interesting" usually means the sky is falling. Inflation reached seven percent at the end of 2021, a rate not seen in forty years.
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Japan and U.S. block advancement in U.N. talks on autonomous weapons
GENEVA – Japan, the United States and other countries have blocked any advancement in U.N. talks toward legally binding measures to ban and regulate the development and use of lethal autonomous weapon systems. The Sixth Review Conference of the Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons ended Friday in Geneva without progress, failing to reflect eight years of work and leaving countries and nongovernmental organizations that have called for legally binding rules expressing disappointment. Also referred to as "killer robots," autonomous weapons are artificial intelligence-powered weapons using facial recognition and algorithms. Once activated, the weapons can select and attack targets without the assistance of a human operator. They pose ethical, legal and security risks.
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