Tech leaders warn against robotic weapons

  • Killer robots including lethal microdrone swarms should be urgently banned
  • It should be done before these weapons of mass destruction go out of control
  • Tesla founder Elon Musk among signatories prohibiting the use of such weapons 

Killer robots – including lethal microdrone swarms – should be urgently banned before a wave of weapons of mass destruction gets out of control, industry leaders say.

Robotics and artificial intelligence experts such as Tesla founder Elon Musk and head of applied AI at Google’s DeepMind Mustafa Suleyman are among 116 signatories of an open letter demanding the United Nations prohibit the use of such weapons internationally.

The weapons are on the edge of development with the potential to create global instability, the experts warn.

 Killer robots including lethal microdrone swarms should be urgently banned (stock image)

‘Unless people want to see new weapons of mass destruction – in the form of vast swarms of lethal microdrones – spreading around the world, it’s imperative to step up and support the United Nations’ efforts to create a treaty,’ Bayesian Logic founder Stuart Russell said.

Key organiser of the letter, University of New South Wales professor Toby Walsh, is launching the joint push at an international AI conference in Melbourne on Monday.

‘Oncedeveloped,theywillpermitarmedconflicttobefoughtatascalegreaterthanever,andattimescalesfasterthanhumanscancomprehend,’ the letter reads.

‘Thesecanbeweaponsofterror,weaponsthatdespotsandterroristsuseagainstinnocentpopulations,andweaponshackedtobehaveinundesirableways.

‘Wedonothavelongtoact.OncethisPandora’sboxisopened,itwillbehardtoclose.’

Element AI founder Yoshua Bengio said the matter needed to be handled similarly to other ‘morally wrong weapons’ like biological, chemical and nuclear weapons.

Experts say it should destroying killer roborts should be done before they go out of control

Experts say it should destroying killer roborts should be done before they go out of control

 

 

Read more at DailyMail.co.uk