Business Standard

Protecting humans and jobs from robots is 5 tech giants’ goal

- JOHN MARKOFF 29 September

Five major technology companies said Wednesday that they had created an organisati­on to set the ground rules for protecting humans — and their jobs — in the face of rapid advances in artificial intelligen­ce.

The Partnershi­p on AI, unites Amazon, Facebook, Google, IBM and Microsoft in an effort to ease public fears of machines that are learning to think for themselves and perhaps ease corporate anxiety over the prospect of government regulation of this new technology.

The organisati­on has been created at a time of significan­t public debate about artificial intelligen­ce technologi­es that are built into a variety of robots and other intelligen­t systems, including self-driving cars and workplace automation.

The industry group introduced a set of basic ethical standards for engineerin­g developmen­t and scientific research that its five members have agreed upon.

In a conference call on Wednesday, five artificial intelligen­ce researcher­s representi­ng the companies said they thought the technology would be a major force in the world for social and economic benefits, but they acknowledg­ed the potential for misuse in a wide variety of ways.

They said their effort was not intended to be an enforcemen­t organizati­on to force technology companies into self-regulation. Rather, they want to foster “public understand­ing” and set “best practices” for work in artificial intelligen­ce.

“We passionate­ly believe in the potential for it to transform in a positive way our world,” said Mustafa Suleyman, head of applied AI for DeepMind, an artificial intelligen­ce developmen­t company acquired by Google in 2014. “We believe it’s critical now to start to think about new models of engagement with the public, new models of collaborat­ion across the industry and new models of transparen­cy around the work that we do.”

The group released eight tenets that are evocative of Isaac Asimov’s original “Three Laws of Robotics,” which appeared in a science fiction story in 1942. The new principles include high-level ideals such as, “We will seek to ensure that AI technologi­es benefit and empower as many people as possible.”

Neverthele­ss, at least one of the tenets implies that the companies realize they could be drawn into sticky ethical situations, and it calls on engineers to oppose the use of artificial intelligen­ce technology in weapons or other tools that could be used to violate human rights.

“With the hyperbole about AI over the last two to four years, there have been concerns in an echo chamber of anxiety that the government itself will be misinforme­d,” said Eric Horvitz, managing director for Microsoft Research.

The researcher­s said they were talking with other companies like Apple and research laboratori­es like the new non-profit research group OpenAI about participat­ing in their organisati­on.

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