The development of autonomous weapons systems raises ethical concerns about the lack of human compassion and potential for civilian casualties.
Arguments for autonomous weapons focus on reducing civilian casualties, but concerns about accidental escalation and uncontrolled destruction must be addressed.
Deep dives
The Urgent Topic of AI in Warfare
Professor Stuart Russell explores the urgent topic of AI in warfare, discussing the potential dangers and implications of lethal autonomous weapons systems.
Banning Killer Robots
Human Rights Watch launches a campaign to ban killer robots, raising concerns about the lack of human compassion in autonomous weapons and the potential for civilian casualties.
Feasibility of Autonomous Weapons
Autonomous weapons already exist and the technology to build them is readily available. Professor Russell discusses the components needed for autonomous weapons, including mobile platforms, perception systems, and tactical decision-making capabilities.
The Pros and Cons of Autonomous Weapons
Arguments for the development and deployment of autonomous weapons focus on reducing civilian casualties and improving targeting precision. However, concerns about accidental escalation, siber infiltration, and the potential for uncontrolled mass destruction raise significant ethical and security issues.
Stuart Russell warns of the dangers of developing autonomous weapon systems - arguing for a system of global control. Weapons that locate, select, and engage human targets without human supervision are already available for use in warfare,. Some argue that AI will reduce collateral damage and civilian casualties. Others believe it could kill on a scale not seen since Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Will future wars be fought entirely by machines, or will one side surrender only when its real losses, military or civilian, become unacceptable? Professor Russell will examine the motivation of major powers developing these types of weapons, the morality of creating algorithms that decide to kill humans, and possible ways forward for the international community as it struggles with these questions.
Stuart Russell is Professor of Computer Science and founder of the Centre for Human-Compatible Artificial Intelligence at the University of California, Berkeley.
The lecture and question-and-answer session was recorded at Manchester University.
Presenter: Anita Anand
Producer: Jim Frank
Editor: Hugh Levinson
Production Coordinator: Brenda Brown
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