How Tech Giants Are Devising Real Ethics for Artificial
Intelligence
By JOHN MARKOFF
September 1, 2016
SAN FRANCISCO — For years, science-fiction moviemakers have been
making us fear the bad things that artificially intelligent machines
might do to their human creators. But for the next decade or two,
our biggest concern is more likely to be that robots will take away
our jobs or bump into us on the highway.
Now five of the world’s largest tech companies are trying to create
a standard of ethics around the creation of artificial intelligence.
While science fiction has focused on the existential threat of A.I.
to humans, researchers at Google’s parent company, Alphabet, and
those from Amazon, Facebook, IBM and Microsoft have been meeting to
discuss more tangible issues, such as the impact of A.I. on jobs,
transportation and even warfare.
Tech companies have long overpromised what artificially intelligent
machines can do. In recent years, however, the A.I. field has made
rapid advances in a range of areas, from self-driving cars and
machines that understand speech, like Amazon’s Echo device, to a new
generation of weapons systems that threaten to automate combat.
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