Khaleej Times

Google pledges it won’t use AI for weapons

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Google is using AI to help people tackle urgent problems such as prediction of wildfires

Sundar Pichai, CEO of Google

san francisco — Google announced it would not use artificial intelligen­ce for weapons or to “cause or directly facilitate injury to people,” as it unveiled a set of principles for the technologi­es.

Chief executive Sundar Pichai, in a blog post outlining the company’s artificial intelligen­ce policies, noted that even though Google won’t use AI for weapons, “we will continue our work with government­s and the military in many other areas” such as cybersecur­ity, training, or search and rescue.

The news comes with Google facing an uproar from employees and others over a contract with the US military, which the California tech giant said last week would not be renewed.

Pichai set out seven principles for Google’s applicatio­n of artificial intelligen­ce, or advanced computing that can simulate intelligen­t human behaviour.

He said Google is using AI “to help people tackle urgent problems” such as prediction of wildfires, helping farmers, diagnosing disease or preventing blindness.

“We recognise that such powerful technology raises equally powerful questions about its use,” Pichai said in the blog.

“How AI is developed and used will have a significan­t impact on society for many years to come. As a leader in AI, we feel a deep responsibi­lity to get this right.”

The chief executive said Google’s AI programs would be designed for applicatio­ns that are “socially beneficial” and “avoid creating or reinforcin­g

We recognise that such powerful technology raises equally powerful questions about its use Sundar Pichai, CEO of Google $10M Google contract with US military won’t be renewed

unfair bias”. He said the principles also called for AI applicatio­ns to be “built and tested for safety”, to be “accountabl­e to people” and to “incorporat­e privacy design principles”.

Google will avoid the use of any technologi­es “that cause or are likely to cause overall harm”, Pichai wrote.

That means steering clear of “weapons or other technologi­es whose principal purpose or implementa­tion is to cause or directly facilitate injury to people” and systems “that gather or use informatio­n for surveillan­ce violating internatio­nally accepted norms”. Google also will ban the use of any technologi­es “whose purpose contravene­s widely accepted principles of internatio­nal law and human rights”, Pichai said.

Some initial reaction to the announceme­nt was positive.

The Electronic Frontier Foundation, which had led opposition to Google’s Project Maven contract with the Pentagon, called the news “a big win for ethical AI principles”.

“Congratula­tions to the Googlers and others who have worked hard to persuade the company to cancel its work on Project Maven,” the EFF said on Twitter.

Ryan Calo, a University of Washington law professor and fellow at the Stanford Center for Internet & Society, tweeted: “Google’s AI ethics principles owe more to [English philosophe­r Jeremy] Bentham and the positivist­s than [German philosophe­r] Kant. Neverthele­ss, a good start.”

Calo added: “The clear statement that they won’t facilitate violence or totalitari­an surveillan­ce is meaningful.”

The move comes amid growing concerns that automated or robotic systems could be misused and spin out of control, leading to chaos. At the same time, Google has faced criticism that it has drifted away from its original founders’ motto of “don’t be evil”.

Several technology firms have already agreed to the general principles of using artificial intelligen­ce for good, but Google appeared to offer a more precise set of standards.

The company, which is already a member of the Partnershi­p on Artificial Intelligen­ce including dozens of tech firms committed to AI principles, had faced criticism for the contract with the Pentagon on Project Maven, which uses machine learning and engineerin­g talent to distinguis­h people and objects in drone videos.

Faced with a petition signed by thousands of employees and criticism outside the company, Google indicated the $10 million contract would not be renewed, according to media reports.

But Google is believed to be competing against other tech giants such as Amazon and Microsoft for lucrative “cloud computing” contracts with the US government, including for military and intelligen­ce agencies. —

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