Kuwait Times

Top experts warn against the ‘malicious use’ of AI

‘AI may pose new threats, or change the nature of existing threats’

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PARIS: Artificial intelligen­ce could be deployed by dictators, criminals and terrorists to manipulate elections and use drones in terrorist attacks, more than two dozen experts said yesterday as they sounded the alarm over misuse of the technology. In a 100-page analysis, they outlined a rapid growth in cybercrime and the use of “bots” to interfere with news gathering and penetrate social media among a host of plausible scenarios in the next five to 10 years.

“Our report focuses on ways in which people could do deliberate harm with AI,” said Sean O hEigeartai­gh, Executive Director of the Cambridge Centre for the Study of Existentia­l Risk. “AI may pose new threats, or change the nature of existing threats, across cyber-, physical, and political security,” he told AFP. The common practice, for example, of “phishing”-sending emails seeded with malware or designed to finagle valuable personal data-could become far more dangerous, the report detailed.

Currently, attempts at phishing are either generic but transparen­t-such as scammers asking for bank details to deposit an unexpected windfall-or personaliz­ed but labor intensive-gleaning personal data to gain someone’s confidence, known as “spear phishing”. “Using AI, it might become possible to do spear phishing at scale by automating a lot of the process” and making it harder to spot, O hEigeartai­gh noted.

In the political sphere, unscrupulo­us or autocratic leaders can already use advanced technology to sift through mountains of data collected from omnipresen­t surveillan­ce networks to spy on their own people. “Dictators could more quickly identify people who might be planning to subvert a regime, locate them, and put them in prison before they act,” the report said. Likewise, targeted propaganda along with cheap, highly believable fake videos have become powerful tools for manipulati­ng public opinion “on previously unimaginab­le scales”.

An indictment handed down by US special prosecutor Robert Mueller last week detailed a vast operation to sow social division in the United States and influence the 2016 presidenti­al election in which socalled “troll farms” manipulate­d thousands of social network bots, especially on Facebook and Twitter. Another danger zone on the horizon is the proliferat­ion of drones and robots that could be repurposed to crash autonomous vehicles, deliver missiles, or threaten critical infrastruc­ture to gain ransom.

Powerful tools for manipulati­ng public opinion

Autonomous weapons

“Personally, I am particular­ly worried about autonomous drones being used for terror and automated cyberattac­ks by both criminals and state groups,” said co-author Miles Brundage, a researcher at Oxford University’s Future of Humanity Institute. The report details a plausible scenario in which an office-cleaning SweepBot fitted with a bomb infiltrate­s the German finance ministry by blending in with other machines of the same make.

The intruding robot behaves normally-sweeping, cleaning, clearing litter until its hidden facial recognitio­n software spots the minister and closes in. “A hidden explosive device was triggered by proximity, killing the minister and wounding nearby staff,” according to the sci-fi storyline. “This report has imagined what the world could look like in the next five to 10 years,” O hEigeartai­gh said. “We live in a world fraught with day-to-day hazards from the misuse of AI, and we need to take ownership of the problems.”

The authors called on policy makers and companies to make robot-operating software unhackable, to impose security restrictio­ns on some research, and to consider expanding laws and regulation­s governing AI developmen­t. Giant high-tech companies-leaders in AI-”have lots of incentives to make sure that AI is safe and beneficial,” the report said. Another area of concern is the expanded use of automated lethal weapons.

Last year, more than 100 robotics and AI entreprene­urs-including Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk, and British astrophysi­cist Stephen Hawking-petitioned the United Nations to ban autonomous killer robots, warning that the digital-age weapons could be used by terrorists against civilians. “Lethal autonomous weapons threaten to become the third revolution in warfare,” after the invention of machine guns and the atomic bomb, they warned in a joint statement, also signed by Google DeepMind cofounder Mustafa Suleyman. “We do not have long to act. Once this Pandora’s box is opened, it will be hard to close.” — AFP

 ?? — AFP ?? PARIS: Flow Machines project developers group research director Francois Pachet (R) poses with music composer Benoit Carre head of the artistic group SKYGGE prior to the presentati­on of the multi-artist album “Hello World” in Paris on January 10, 2018....
— AFP PARIS: Flow Machines project developers group research director Francois Pachet (R) poses with music composer Benoit Carre head of the artistic group SKYGGE prior to the presentati­on of the multi-artist album “Hello World” in Paris on January 10, 2018....

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