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China's new AI policy doesn't prevent it from building autonomous weapons

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The People's Republic of China recently published a "position paper" detailing the nation's views on military AI regulation. Having thoroughly perused it, we've come to the following conclusion: it's gibberish. Up front: The first thing you want to know when a global superpower releases official government documentation detailing its views on the use of artificial intelligence for military applications is whether the signatory intends to develop lethal autonomous weapons systems (LAWS). China's position paper makes absolutely no mention of restricting the use of machines capable of choosing and firing on targets autonomously. Tickets to TNW 2022 are available now!

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  Industry: Government > Military (1.00)

Thousands of scientists pledge not to help build killer AI robots

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Thousands of scientists who specialise in artificial intelligence (AI) have declared that they will not participate in the development or manufacture of robots that can identify and attack people without human oversight. Demis Hassabis at Google DeepMind and Elon Musk at the US rocket company SpaceX are among more than 2,400 signatories to the pledge which intends to deter military firms and nations from building lethal autonomous weapon systems, also known as Laws. The move is the latest from concerned scientists and organisations to highlight the dangers of handing over life and death decisions to AI-enhanced machines. It follows calls for a preemptive ban on technology that campaigners believe could usher in a new generation of weapons of mass destruction. Orchestrated by the Boston-based organisation, The Future of Life Institute, the pledge calls on governments to agree norms, laws and regulations that stigmatise and effectively outlaw the development of killer robots.