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DUKAS_25910106_POL
2012 Clinton Global Initiative
September 23, 2012 - New York, New York, United States: Bill Clinton, Former President of the United States speaks at a meeting on the topic of "Design for Impact" at the 2012 Clinton Global Initiative. Lorenzo Ciniglio/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
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DUKAS_25910107_POL
2012 Clinton Global Initiative
September 23, 2012 - New York, New York, United States: Bill Clinton, Former President of the United States speaks at a meeting on the topic of "Design for Impact" at the 2012 Clinton Global Initiative. Lorenzo Ciniglio/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
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DUKAS_25910119_POL
2012 Clinton Global Initiative
September 23, 2012 - New York, New York, United States: Singer Smokey Robinson on stage at the 2012 Clinton Global Initiative. Lorenzo Ciniglio/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
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DUKAS_25910123_POL
2012 Clinton Global Initiative
September 23, 2012 - New York, New York, United States: Chelsea Clinton and her Husband, Marc Mezvinsky listen to a meeting on the topic of "Design for Impact" at the 2012 Clinton Global Initiative. Lorenzo Ciniglio/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
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DUKAS_25910128_POL
2012 Clinton Global Initiative
September 23, 2012 - New York, New York, United States: Chelsea Clinton and her Husband, Marc Mezvinsky listen to a meeting on the topic of "Design for Impact" at the 2012 Clinton Global Initiative. Lorenzo Ciniglio/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
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DUKAS_25910129_POL
2012 Clinton Global Initiative
September 23, 2012 - New York, New York, United States: Singer Smokey Robinson on stage at the 2012 Clinton Global Initiative. Lorenzo Ciniglio/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
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DUKAS_25910142_POL
2012 Clinton Global Initiative
September 23, 2012 - New York, New York, United States: Chelsea Clinton and her Husband, Marc Mezvinsky listen to a meeting on the topic of "Design for Impact" at the 2012 Clinton Global Initiative. Lorenzo Ciniglio/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
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DUKAS_25910143_POL
2012 Clinton Global Initiative
September 23, 2012 - New York, New York, United States: Chelsea Clinton and her Husband, Marc Mezvinsky listen to a meeting on the topic of "Design for Impact" at the 2012 Clinton Global Initiative. Lorenzo Ciniglio/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
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DUKAS_25910149_POL
2012 Clinton Global Initiative
September 23, 2012 - New York, New York, United States: Chelsea Clinton and her Husband, Marc Mezvinsky listen to a meeting on the topic of "Design for Impact" at the 2012 Clinton Global Initiative. Lorenzo Ciniglio/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
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DUKAS_25910159_POL
2012 Clinton Global Initiative
September 23, 2012 - New York, New York, United States: Rania Al Abdullah, Queen of Jordan speaks at a meeting on the topic of "Design for Impact" at the 2012 Clinton Global Initiative. Lorenzo Ciniglio/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
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DUKAS_25910160_POL
2012 Clinton Global Initiative
September 23, 2012 - New York, New York, United States: Michael T. Duke, President and CEO of Wal-Mart Stores speaks at a meeting on the topic of "Design for Impact" at the 2012 Clinton Global Initiative. Lorenzo Ciniglio/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
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DUKAS_25910163_POL
2012 Clinton Global Initiative
September 23, 2012 - New York, New York, United States: Michael T. Duke, President and CEO of Wal-Mart Stores speaks at a meeting on the topic of "Design for Impact" at the 2012 Clinton Global Initiative. Lorenzo Ciniglio/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
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DUKAS_25910173_POL
2012 Clinton Global Initiative
September 23, 2012 - New York, New York, United States: Michael T. Duke, President and CEO of Wal-Mart Stores speaks at a meeting on the topic of "Design for Impact" at the 2012 Clinton Global Initiative. Lorenzo Ciniglio/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
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DUKAS_25910180_POL
2012 Clinton Global Initiative
September 23, 2012 - New York, New York, United States: Ban Ki-Moon, Secretary-General of the United Nations and Rania Al Abdullah, Queen of Jordan in the background attend a meeting on the topic of "Design for Impact" at the 2012 Clinton Global Initiative. Lorenzo Ciniglio/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
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DUKAS_25910194_POL
2012 Clinton Global Initiative
September 23, 2012 - New York, New York, United States: Jim Yong Kim, President, World Bank Group and Bill Clinton speak at a meeting on the topic of "Design for Impact" at the 2012 Clinton Global Initiative. Lorenzo Ciniglio/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
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DUKAS_25910198_POL
2012 Clinton Global Initiative
September 23, 2012 - New York, New York, United States: Rania Al Abdullah, Queen of Jordan speaks at a meeting on the topic of "Design for Impact" at the 2012 Clinton Global Initiative. Lorenzo Ciniglio/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
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DUKAS_25910200_POL
2012 Clinton Global Initiative
September 23, 2012 - New York, New York, United States: Michael T. Duke, President and CEO of Wal-Mart Stores and Rania Al Abdullah, Queen of Jordan listen to Bill Clinton, Former President of the United States speak at a meeting on the topic of "Design for Impact" at the 2012 Clinton Global Initiative. Lorenzo Ciniglio/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
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DUKAS_25910201_POL
2012 Clinton Global Initiative
September 23, 2012 - New York, New York, United States: Ban Ki-Moon, Secretary-General of the United Nations speaks at a meeting on the topic of "Design for Impact" at the 2012 Clinton Global Initiative. Lorenzo Ciniglio/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
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DUKAS_25954512_POL
Chelsea Clinton at Clinton Global Initiative
September 25, 2012 - New York, New York, United States: Chelsea Clinton at the 2012 Clinton Global Initiative at the Sheraton Hotel in New York on Tuesday, September 25, 2012. (Lorenzo Ciniglio/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
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DUKAS_25956817_POL
Muhtar Kent at Clinton Global Initiative
September 25, 2012 - New York, New York, United States: Muhtar Kent is President and Chief Executive Officer of The Coca-Cola Company at the 2012 Clinton Global Initiative at the Sheraton Hotel in New York on Tuesday, September 25, 2012. (Lorenzo Ciniglio/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
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DUKAS_25956821_POL
Muhtar Kent at Clinton Global Initiative
September 25, 2012 - New York, New York, United States: Muhtar Kent is President and Chief Executive Officer of The Coca-Cola Company at the 2012 Clinton Global Initiative at the Sheraton Hotel in New York on Tuesday, September 25, 2012. (Lorenzo Ciniglio/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
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DUKAS_107051894_EYE
dukas 107051894 eye
KingÕs Cross station in London. Regulator looking at use of facial recognition at King's Cross site. Information commissioner says use of the technology must be Ônecessary and proportionateÕ. The UKÕs privacy regulator said it is studying the use of controversial facial recognition technology by property companies amid concerns that its use in CCTV systems at the KingÕs Cross development in central London may not be legal.
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DUKAS_107051895_EYE
dukas 107051895 eye
KingÕs Cross station in London. Regulator looking at use of facial recognition at King's Cross site. Information commissioner says use of the technology must be Ônecessary and proportionateÕ. The UKÕs privacy regulator said it is studying the use of controversial facial recognition technology by property companies amid concerns that its use in CCTV systems at the KingÕs Cross development in central London may not be legal.
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DUKAS_107051896_EYE
dukas 107051896 eye
KingÕs Cross station in London. Regulator looking at use of facial recognition at King's Cross site. Information commissioner says use of the technology must be Ônecessary and proportionateÕ. The UKÕs privacy regulator said it is studying the use of controversial facial recognition technology by property companies amid concerns that its use in CCTV systems at the KingÕs Cross development in central London may not be legal.
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DUKAS_107051808_EYE
The Google construction site near King’s Cross station in London.
The Google construction site near KingÕs Cross station in London. Regulator looking at use of facial recognition at King's Cross site. Information commissioner says use of the technology must be Ônecessary and proportionateÕ. The UKÕs privacy regulator said it is studying the use of controversial facial recognition technology by property companies amid concerns that its use in CCTV systems at the KingÕs Cross development in central London may not be legal.
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DUKAS_107051810_EYE
Coal Drop Yard near King’s Cross station in London.
Coal Drop Yard near KingÕs Cross station in London. Regulator looking at use of facial recognition at King's Cross site. Information commissioner says use of the technology must be Ônecessary and proportionateÕ. The UKÕs privacy regulator said it is studying the use of controversial facial recognition technology by property companies amid concerns that its use in CCTV systems at the KingÕs Cross development in central London may not be legal.
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DUKAS_108733116_EYE
Ex-Google worker fears 'killer robots' could cause mass atrocities. Engineer who quit over military drone project warns AI might also accidentally start a war
Ex-Google worker fears 'killer robots' could cause mass atrocities. Engineer who quit over military drone project warns AI might also accidentally start a war. A new generation of autonomous weapons or Òkiller robotsÓ could accidentally start a war or cause mass atrocities, a former top Google software engineer has warned. Laura Nolan, who resigned from Google last year in protest at being sent to work on a project to dramatically enhance US military drone technology, has called for all AI killing machines not operated by humans to be banned. Nolan said killer robots not guided by human remote control should be outlawed by the same type of international treaty that bans chemical weapons. Unlike drones, which are controlled by military teams often thousands of miles away from where the flying weapon is being deployed, Nolan said killer robots have the potential to do Òcalamitous things that they were not originally programmed forÓ. There is no suggestion that Google is involved in the development of autonomous weapons systems. Last month a UN panel of government experts debated autonomous weapons and found Google to be eschewing AI for use in weapons systems and engaging in best practice. Pictured: Laura Nolan former Google employee.
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DUKAS_108733108_EYE
Ex-Google worker fears 'killer robots' could cause mass atrocities. Engineer who quit over military drone project warns AI might also accidentally start a war
Ex-Google worker fears 'killer robots' could cause mass atrocities. Engineer who quit over military drone project warns AI might also accidentally start a war. A new generation of autonomous weapons or “killer robots” could accidentally start a war or cause mass atrocities, a former top Google software engineer has warned. Laura Nolan, who resigned from Google last year in protest at being sent to work on a project to dramatically enhance US military drone technology, has called for all AI killing machines not operated by humans to be banned. Nolan said killer robots not guided by human remote control should be outlawed by the same type of international treaty that bans chemical weapons. Unlike drones, which are controlled by military teams often thousands of miles away from where the flying weapon is being deployed, Nolan said killer robots have the potential to do “calamitous things that they were not originally programmed for”. There is no suggestion that Google is involved in the development of autonomous weapons systems. Last month a UN panel of government experts debated autonomous weapons and found Google to be eschewing AI for use in weapons systems and engaging in best practice. Pictured: Laura Nolan former Google employee.
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DUKAS_108733113_EYE
Ex-Google worker fears 'killer robots' could cause mass atrocities. Engineer who quit over military drone project warns AI might also accidentally start a war
Ex-Google worker fears 'killer robots' could cause mass atrocities. Engineer who quit over military drone project warns AI might also accidentally start a war. A new generation of autonomous weapons or “killer robots” could accidentally start a war or cause mass atrocities, a former top Google software engineer has warned. Laura Nolan, who resigned from Google last year in protest at being sent to work on a project to dramatically enhance US military drone technology, has called for all AI killing machines not operated by humans to be banned. Nolan said killer robots not guided by human remote control should be outlawed by the same type of international treaty that bans chemical weapons. Unlike drones, which are controlled by military teams often thousands of miles away from where the flying weapon is being deployed, Nolan said killer robots have the potential to do “calamitous things that they were not originally programmed for”. There is no suggestion that Google is involved in the development of autonomous weapons systems. Last month a UN panel of government experts debated autonomous weapons and found Google to be eschewing AI for use in weapons systems and engaging in best practice. Pictured: Laura Nolan former Google employee.
© Johnny Savage / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_108733107_EYE
Ex-Google worker fears 'killer robots' could cause mass atrocities. Engineer who quit over military drone project warns AI might also accidentally start a war
Ex-Google worker fears 'killer robots' could cause mass atrocities. Engineer who quit over military drone project warns AI might also accidentally start a war. A new generation of autonomous weapons or “killer robots” could accidentally start a war or cause mass atrocities, a former top Google software engineer has warned. Laura Nolan, who resigned from Google last year in protest at being sent to work on a project to dramatically enhance US military drone technology, has called for all AI killing machines not operated by humans to be banned. Nolan said killer robots not guided by human remote control should be outlawed by the same type of international treaty that bans chemical weapons. Unlike drones, which are controlled by military teams often thousands of miles away from where the flying weapon is being deployed, Nolan said killer robots have the potential to do “calamitous things that they were not originally programmed for”. There is no suggestion that Google is involved in the development of autonomous weapons systems. Last month a UN panel of government experts debated autonomous weapons and found Google to be eschewing AI for use in weapons systems and engaging in best practice. Pictured: Laura Nolan former Google employee.
© Johnny Savage / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_108733109_EYE
Ex-Google worker fears 'killer robots' could cause mass atrocities. Engineer who quit over military drone project warns AI might also accidentally start a war
Ex-Google worker fears 'killer robots' could cause mass atrocities. Engineer who quit over military drone project warns AI might also accidentally start a war. A new generation of autonomous weapons or “killer robots” could accidentally start a war or cause mass atrocities, a former top Google software engineer has warned. Laura Nolan, who resigned from Google last year in protest at being sent to work on a project to dramatically enhance US military drone technology, has called for all AI killing machines not operated by humans to be banned. Nolan said killer robots not guided by human remote control should be outlawed by the same type of international treaty that bans chemical weapons. Unlike drones, which are controlled by military teams often thousands of miles away from where the flying weapon is being deployed, Nolan said killer robots have the potential to do “calamitous things that they were not originally programmed for”. There is no suggestion that Google is involved in the development of autonomous weapons systems. Last month a UN panel of government experts debated autonomous weapons and found Google to be eschewing AI for use in weapons systems and engaging in best practice. Pictured: Laura Nolan former Google employee.
© Johnny Savage / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_108733117_EYE
Ex-Google worker fears 'killer robots' could cause mass atrocities. Engineer who quit over military drone project warns AI might also accidentally start a war
Ex-Google worker fears 'killer robots' could cause mass atrocities. Engineer who quit over military drone project warns AI might also accidentally start a war. A new generation of autonomous weapons or “killer robots” could accidentally start a war or cause mass atrocities, a former top Google software engineer has warned. Laura Nolan, who resigned from Google last year in protest at being sent to work on a project to dramatically enhance US military drone technology, has called for all AI killing machines not operated by humans to be banned. Nolan said killer robots not guided by human remote control should be outlawed by the same type of international treaty that bans chemical weapons. Unlike drones, which are controlled by military teams often thousands of miles away from where the flying weapon is being deployed, Nolan said killer robots have the potential to do “calamitous things that they were not originally programmed for”. There is no suggestion that Google is involved in the development of autonomous weapons systems. Last month a UN panel of government experts debated autonomous weapons and found Google to be eschewing AI for use in weapons systems and engaging in best practice. Pictured: Laura Nolan former Google employee.
© Johnny Savage / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_108733115_EYE
Ex-Google worker fears 'killer robots' could cause mass atrocities. Engineer who quit over military drone project warns AI might also accidentally start a war
Ex-Google worker fears 'killer robots' could cause mass atrocities. Engineer who quit over military drone project warns AI might also accidentally start a war. A new generation of autonomous weapons or “killer robots” could accidentally start a war or cause mass atrocities, a former top Google software engineer has warned. Laura Nolan, who resigned from Google last year in protest at being sent to work on a project to dramatically enhance US military drone technology, has called for all AI killing machines not operated by humans to be banned. Nolan said killer robots not guided by human remote control should be outlawed by the same type of international treaty that bans chemical weapons. Unlike drones, which are controlled by military teams often thousands of miles away from where the flying weapon is being deployed, Nolan said killer robots have the potential to do “calamitous things that they were not originally programmed for”. There is no suggestion that Google is involved in the development of autonomous weapons systems. Last month a UN panel of government experts debated autonomous weapons and found Google to be eschewing AI for use in weapons systems and engaging in best practice. Pictured: Laura Nolan former Google employee.
© Johnny Savage / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_108733114_EYE
Ex-Google worker fears 'killer robots' could cause mass atrocities. Engineer who quit over military drone project warns AI might also accidentally start a war
Ex-Google worker fears 'killer robots' could cause mass atrocities. Engineer who quit over military drone project warns AI might also accidentally start a war. A new generation of autonomous weapons or “killer robots” could accidentally start a war or cause mass atrocities, a former top Google software engineer has warned. Laura Nolan, who resigned from Google last year in protest at being sent to work on a project to dramatically enhance US military drone technology, has called for all AI killing machines not operated by humans to be banned. Nolan said killer robots not guided by human remote control should be outlawed by the same type of international treaty that bans chemical weapons. Unlike drones, which are controlled by military teams often thousands of miles away from where the flying weapon is being deployed, Nolan said killer robots have the potential to do “calamitous things that they were not originally programmed for”. There is no suggestion that Google is involved in the development of autonomous weapons systems. Last month a UN panel of government experts debated autonomous weapons and found Google to be eschewing AI for use in weapons systems and engaging in best practice. Pictured: Laura Nolan former Google employee.
© Johnny Savage / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_108733112_EYE
Ex-Google worker fears 'killer robots' could cause mass atrocities. Engineer who quit over military drone project warns AI might also accidentally start a war
Ex-Google worker fears 'killer robots' could cause mass atrocities. Engineer who quit over military drone project warns AI might also accidentally start a war. A new generation of autonomous weapons or “killer robots” could accidentally start a war or cause mass atrocities, a former top Google software engineer has warned. Laura Nolan, who resigned from Google last year in protest at being sent to work on a project to dramatically enhance US military drone technology, has called for all AI killing machines not operated by humans to be banned. Nolan said killer robots not guided by human remote control should be outlawed by the same type of international treaty that bans chemical weapons. Unlike drones, which are controlled by military teams often thousands of miles away from where the flying weapon is being deployed, Nolan said killer robots have the potential to do “calamitous things that they were not originally programmed for”. There is no suggestion that Google is involved in the development of autonomous weapons systems. Last month a UN panel of government experts debated autonomous weapons and found Google to be eschewing AI for use in weapons systems and engaging in best practice. Pictured: Laura Nolan former Google employee.
© Johnny Savage / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_108733106_EYE
Ex-Google worker fears 'killer robots' could cause mass atrocities. Engineer who quit over military drone project warns AI might also accidentally start a war
Ex-Google worker fears 'killer robots' could cause mass atrocities. Engineer who quit over military drone project warns AI might also accidentally start a war. A new generation of autonomous weapons or “killer robots” could accidentally start a war or cause mass atrocities, a former top Google software engineer has warned. Laura Nolan, who resigned from Google last year in protest at being sent to work on a project to dramatically enhance US military drone technology, has called for all AI killing machines not operated by humans to be banned. Nolan said killer robots not guided by human remote control should be outlawed by the same type of international treaty that bans chemical weapons. Unlike drones, which are controlled by military teams often thousands of miles away from where the flying weapon is being deployed, Nolan said killer robots have the potential to do “calamitous things that they were not originally programmed for”. There is no suggestion that Google is involved in the development of autonomous weapons systems. Last month a UN panel of government experts debated autonomous weapons and found Google to be eschewing AI for use in weapons systems and engaging in best practice. Pictured: Laura Nolan former Google employee.
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DUKAS_108733111_EYE
Ex-Google worker fears 'killer robots' could cause mass atrocities. Engineer who quit over military drone project warns AI might also accidentally start a war
Ex-Google worker fears 'killer robots' could cause mass atrocities. Engineer who quit over military drone project warns AI might also accidentally start a war. A new generation of autonomous weapons or “killer robots” could accidentally start a war or cause mass atrocities, a former top Google software engineer has warned. Laura Nolan, who resigned from Google last year in protest at being sent to work on a project to dramatically enhance US military drone technology, has called for all AI killing machines not operated by humans to be banned. Nolan said killer robots not guided by human remote control should be outlawed by the same type of international treaty that bans chemical weapons. Unlike drones, which are controlled by military teams often thousands of miles away from where the flying weapon is being deployed, Nolan said killer robots have the potential to do “calamitous things that they were not originally programmed for”. There is no suggestion that Google is involved in the development of autonomous weapons systems. Last month a UN panel of government experts debated autonomous weapons and found Google to be eschewing AI for use in weapons systems and engaging in best practice. Pictured: Laura Nolan former Google employee.
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DUKAS_108733110_EYE
Ex-Google worker fears 'killer robots' could cause mass atrocities. Engineer who quit over military drone project warns AI might also accidentally start a war
Ex-Google worker fears 'killer robots' could cause mass atrocities. Engineer who quit over military drone project warns AI might also accidentally start a war. A new generation of autonomous weapons or “killer robots” could accidentally start a war or cause mass atrocities, a former top Google software engineer has warned. Laura Nolan, who resigned from Google last year in protest at being sent to work on a project to dramatically enhance US military drone technology, has called for all AI killing machines not operated by humans to be banned. Nolan said killer robots not guided by human remote control should be outlawed by the same type of international treaty that bans chemical weapons. Unlike drones, which are controlled by military teams often thousands of miles away from where the flying weapon is being deployed, Nolan said killer robots have the potential to do “calamitous things that they were not originally programmed for”. There is no suggestion that Google is involved in the development of autonomous weapons systems. Last month a UN panel of government experts debated autonomous weapons and found Google to be eschewing AI for use in weapons systems and engaging in best practice. Pictured: Laura Nolan former Google employee.
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DUKAS_107799252_EYE
London's coding workshops
Inside London's coding workshops and why it's just like solving a puzzle. New workshops are disrupting tech by teaching novices how to code. Attendees pictured at a recent coding event at Google's Victoria office, London.
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DUKAS_107799250_EYE
London's coding workshops
Inside London's coding workshops and why it's just like solving a puzzle. New workshops are disrupting tech by teaching novices how to code. Attendees pictured at a recent coding event at Google's Victoria office, London.
© Daniel Hambury / Evening Standard / eyevine
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DUKAS_107799253_EYE
London's coding workshops
Inside London's coding workshops and why it's just like solving a puzzle. New workshops are disrupting tech by teaching novices how to code. Attendees pictured at a recent coding event at Google's Victoria office, London.
© Daniel Hambury / Evening Standard / eyevine
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DUKAS_107799255_EYE
London's coding workshops
Inside London's coding workshops and why it's just like solving a puzzle. New workshops are disrupting tech by teaching novices how to code. Attendees pictured at a recent coding event at Google's Victoria office, London.
© Daniel Hambury / Evening Standard / eyevine
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London's coding workshops
Inside London's coding workshops and why it's just like solving a puzzle. New workshops are disrupting tech by teaching novices how to code. Attendees pictured at a recent coding event at Google's Victoria office, London.
© Daniel Hambury / Evening Standard / eyevine
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DUKAS_107799254_EYE
London's coding workshops
Inside London's coding workshops and why it's just like solving a puzzle. New workshops are disrupting tech by teaching novices how to code. Attendees pictured at a recent coding event at Google's Victoria office, London.
© Daniel Hambury / Evening Standard / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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© Evening Standard / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_107799259_EYE
London's coding workshops
Inside London's coding workshops and why it's just like solving a puzzle. New workshops are disrupting tech by teaching novices how to code. Attendees pictured at a recent coding event at Google's Victoria office, London.
© Daniel Hambury / Evening Standard / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Evening Standard / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_107800912_EYE
London's coding workshops
Inside London's coding workshops and why it's just like solving a puzzle. New workshops are disrupting tech by teaching novices how to code. Attendees pictured at a recent coding event at Google's Victoria office, London.
© Daniel Hambury / Evening Standard / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Evening Standard / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_107799257_EYE
London's coding workshops
Inside London's coding workshops and why it's just like solving a puzzle. New workshops are disrupting tech by teaching novices how to code. Attendees pictured at a recent coding event at Google's Victoria office, London.
© Daniel Hambury / Evening Standard / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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AI robot Ai-Da prior to giving evidence to a House of Lords inquiry where she will answer questions concerning tech and creativity. The House of Lords, Palace of Westminster, London.
AI robot Ai-Da prior to giving evidence to a House of Lords inquiry where she will answer questions concerning tech and creativity.
The House of Lords, Palace of Westminster, London, UK.
11th October 2022
Ai-Da Robot makes history as the first robot to speak at the House of Lords as part of their 'A Creative Future inquiry' examining potential challenges for the creative industries and looking at how they can adapt as tech advances.
Able to converse using a specially designed language model, she appears alongside creator Aidan Meller in front of members of the House of Lords communications and digital committee.
© Elliott Franks / eyevine
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http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_145339256_EYE
AI robot Ai-Da prior to giving evidence to a House of Lords inquiry where she will answer questions concerning tech and creativity. The House of Lords, Palace of Westminster, London.
AI robot Ai-Da prior to giving evidence to a House of Lords inquiry where she will answer questions concerning tech and creativity.
The House of Lords, Palace of Westminster, London, UK.
11th October 2022
Ai-Da Robot makes history as the first robot to speak at the House of Lords as part of their 'A Creative Future inquiry' examining potential challenges for the creative industries and looking at how they can adapt as tech advances.
Able to converse using a specially designed language model, she appears alongside creator Aidan Meller in front of members of the House of Lords communications and digital committee.
© Elliott Franks / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Elliott Franks / eyevine. -
DUKAS_145339303_EYE
AI robot Ai-Da prior to giving evidence to a House of Lords inquiry where she will answer questions concerning tech and creativity. The House of Lords, Palace of Westminster, London.
AI robot Ai-Da prior to giving evidence to a House of Lords inquiry where she will answer questions concerning tech and creativity.
The House of Lords, Palace of Westminster, London, UK.
11th October 2022
Ai-Da Robot makes history as the first robot to speak at the House of Lords as part of their 'A Creative Future inquiry' examining potential challenges for the creative industries and looking at how they can adapt as tech advances.
Able to converse using a specially designed language model, she appears alongside creator Aidan Meller in front of members of the House of Lords communications and digital committee.
© Elliott Franks / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Elliott Franks / eyevine.