Slashdot Mirror


Cambridge University To Open "Terminator Center" To Study Threat From AI

If the thought of a robot apocalypse is keeping you up at night, you can relax. Scientists at Cambridge University are studying the potential problem. From the article: "A center for 'terminator studies,' where leading academics will study the threat that robots pose to humanity, is set to open at Cambridge University. Its purpose will be to study the four greatest threats to the human species - artificial intelligence, climate change, nuclear war and rogue biotechnology."

9 of 274 comments (clear)

  1. How is AI on the list? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Of the four things cited, AI is perhaps the least likely to kill us all, seeing as it doesn't exist.

    1. Re:How is AI on the list? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Movie-style AI might not exist today. However, we do have drones flying around, the better ones depending only very little on their human controller. It won't be too long before our friends at Raytheon etc. convince our others friends in the government that their newest drone is capable of making the 'kill decision' all by itself using some fancy schmancy software.

    2. Re:How is AI on the list? by durrr · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Of the four things cited, none is "giant rock from space" which is pretty much more likely to kill us than the four mentioned combined.

    3. Re:How is AI on the list? by Captain+Hook · · Score: 3, Insightful

      My understanding of those robo-turrents is that they have sufficent image processing to identify a human, but nowhere near enough to identify friend or foe or to infer anything based on actions and expected behaviours, it's why they need to send video feeds back to the control center so there is still a human in the loop to decide on firing.

      That doesn't mean the turret couldn't be left in free fire mode incase of an all out ground attack from the NK line and it just shoots at anything that moves but that only makes it a very complicated reusable anti-personel mine. There isn't much "AI" there, only a shape recognition.

      What people tend to mean about proper AI in this context is to identify humans, recognising friend or foe, either through appearance or behaviour and choose an appropriate course of action without human interaction - a bit like ED-209 from Robocop, a room full off people but it identified the guy holding a gun as the possible threat and only the guy holding the gun, of course when the gun was put down it didn't change it's threat assessment so there were bugs in the system :)

      --
      These comments are my personal opinions and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the other voices in my head.
  2. Beware the angry Roomas by Crash24 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Relevant - if facetious - commentary by Randall Munroe. Seriously though, I think a hostile hard AI would get away with much more damage as a software entity on the Internet than in physical space.

  3. Re:I'm done. Where's my million dollar grant? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It takes only 1 dumb human to remove the air gap or allow for a system that removes air gaps of other systems.

  4. Re:I'm done. Where's my million dollar grant? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    To summarize the summary of the summary: People are a problem.

  5. A Question of Scale by wienerschnizzel · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Some things don't scale well. Like with the space race - humanity went from sending a pound of metal into low orbit to putting a man on the moon within 12 years. Everybody assumed that by 2012 we would be colonizing the moons of Jupiter. Yet it turned out human space travel becomes exponentially difficult with the distance.

    I'm afraid the same thing goes for software. The more complicated it gets the more fragile it is.

  6. Daily Mail Source? by BiophysicalLOVE · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If the Daily Mail is your source for any story, it would be in your best interests to instantly dismiss it.