Why we need to regulate non-state use of arms
An emerging arms race between major powers in the area of lethal autonomous weapons systems is attracting a great deal of attention. Negotiations on a potential treaty to ban such weapons...
1982, BA in Physics, Oxford; 1986, PhD in Computer Science, Stanford. Since 1986, Professor, University of California, Berkeley. Fellow, present or former: AAAS; ACM; AAAI; Chaires Blaise Pascal. Research interests: all areas of artificial intelligence; nuclear treaty verification; intensive care medicine; long-term future of human and machine intelligence.
An emerging arms race between major powers in the area of lethal autonomous weapons systems is attracting a great deal of attention. Negotiations on a potential treaty to ban such weapons...
Current trends in AI are nothing if not remarkable. Day after day, we hear stories about systems and machines taking on tasks that, until very recently, we saw as the exclusive and perman...
Many physical tasks previously seen as un-automatable can now be performed by machines, from medical diagnoses to legal document drafting. Meanwhile, the need for remote working during th...
What is artificial general intelligence and what will it mean if we ever get to develop it? What are the biggest risks of AI for our society? Can we control the way it affects our everyda...
One of the advantages that CEOs and celebrities have over most people is that they don’t need to spend much time handling the uninteresting, time-consuming aspects of daily life: scheduli...
Catch up with the debate on automated weapons and killer machines in the session What If Robots Go to War. It'll be livestreamed from Davos at 15.00 on Thursday 21 January 2016.