Stephen Hawking Says We Should Really Be Scared Of Capitalism, Not Robots

http://m.huffpost.com/us/entry/5616c20ce4b0dbb8000d9f15

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  1. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Emerging technologies and the future of humanity
    http://bos.sagepub.com/content/71/6/29.full

    Emerging technologies are not the danger. Failure of human imagination, optimism, energy, and creativity is the danger.

    Why the future doesn’t need us: Our most powerful 21st-century technologies—robotics, genetic engineering, and nanotech—are threatening to make humans an endangered species. —Bill Joy, co-founder and at the time chief scientist, Sun Microsystems, 20001

    Although it was not clear at the time, Bill Joy’s article warning of the dangers of emerging technologies was to spawn a veritable “dystopia industry.” More recent contributions have tended to focus on artificial intelligence, or AI; electric car and space technology entrepreneur Elon Musk has warned that AI is “summoning the demon” (Mack, 2015), while physicist Stephen Hawking has argued that “the development of full artificial intelligence could spell the end of the human race” (Cellan-Jones, 2014). The Future of Life Institute (2015) recently released an open letter signed by many scientific and research notables urging a ban on “offensive autonomous weapons beyond meaningful human control.” Meanwhile, the UN holds conferences and European activists mount campaigns against what they characterize as “killer robots” (see, e.g., Human Rights Watch, 2012). Headlines reinforce a sense of existential crisis; in the military and security domain, cyber conflict runs rampant, with hackers accessing millions of US personnel records, including sensitive security clearance documents. Technologies such as uncrewed aerial vehicles, commonly referred to as “drones,” are highly contentious in both civil and conflict environments, for many different reasons. A recent US Army Research Laboratory report foresees genetically and technologically enhanced soldiers networked with their battlespace robotic partners and remarks that “the presence of super humans on the battlefield in the 2050 timeframe is highly likely because the various components needed to enable this development already exist and are undergoing rapid evolution” (Kott et al., 2015: 19).

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