The AI apocalypse has been cancelled. A rash of recent headlines blared that Google was developing a "kill switch to stop a robot uprising against human," as The Telegraph put it, with a picture of a menacing metal army. Such superintelligent machines could revolutionize everything from transport to social care. But their rise raises tricky questions about everything from human survival to theology. New Scientist went in search of answers at a private meeting of researchers, philosophers and ethicists organized by Rustat Conferences at Jesus College, Cambridge UK. Here, Paul-Choudhury argues that scare stories about killer robots are missing the point; the future of AI will be far stranger than that.
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