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DUKAS_158986464_EYE
Debbie Weinstein
AI training at Google’s offices.
Kings Cross, London
- Debbie Weinstein, MD, Google UK and Ireland
27-07-2023
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DUKAS_158986466_EYE
Debbie Weinstein
AI training at Google’s offices.
Kings Cross, London
- Debbie Weinstein, MD, Google UK and Ireland
27-07-2023
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_158986465_EYE
Debbie Weinstein
AI training at Google’s offices.
Kings Cross, London
- Debbie Weinstein, MD, Google UK and Ireland
27-07-2023
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_158986463_EYE
Debbie Weinstein
AI training at Google’s offices.
Kings Cross, London
- Debbie Weinstein, MD, Google UK and Ireland
27-07-2023
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_158986468_EYE
Debbie Weinstein
AI training at Google’s offices.
Kings Cross, London
- Debbie Weinstein, MD, Google UK and Ireland
27-07-2023
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_158986467_EYE
Debbie Weinstein
AI training at Google’s offices.
Kings Cross, London
- Debbie Weinstein, MD, Google UK and Ireland
27-07-2023
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_159027539_EYE
AI for all? Google ups the ante with free UK training courses for firms
AI training at Google’s offices.
Kings Cross, London
27-07-2023
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_159027544_EYE
AI for all? Google ups the ante with free UK training courses for firms
AI training at Google’s offices.
Kings Cross, London
27-07-2023
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_159027540_EYE
AI for all? Google ups the ante with free UK training courses for firms
AI training at Google’s offices.
Kings Cross, London
27-07-2023
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_159027537_EYE
AI for all? Google ups the ante with free UK training courses for firms
AI training at Google’s offices.
Kings Cross, London
27-07-2023
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_159027535_EYE
AI for all? Google ups the ante with free UK training courses for firms
AI training at Google’s offices.
Kings Cross, London
27-07-2023
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_159027542_EYE
AI for all? Google ups the ante with free UK training courses for firms
AI training at Google’s offices.
Kings Cross, London
27-07-2023
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_159027534_EYE
AI for all? Google ups the ante with free UK training courses for firms
AI training at Google’s offices.
Kings Cross, London
27-07-2023
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_159027538_EYE
AI for all? Google ups the ante with free UK training courses for firms
AI training at Google’s offices.
Kings Cross, London
- Ruth Porat, Chief Financial Officer, Alphabet
27-07-2023
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
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© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_159027543_EYE
AI for all? Google ups the ante with free UK training courses for firms
AI training at Google’s offices.
Kings Cross, London
- Debbie Weinstein, MD, Google UK and Ireland
27-07-2023
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_159027541_EYE
AI for all? Google ups the ante with free UK training courses for firms
AI training at Google’s offices.
Kings Cross, London
- Ruth Borat, Chief Financial Officer, Alphabet
27-07-2023
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_159027536_EYE
AI for all? Google ups the ante with free UK training courses for firms
Meeting at Google’s offices.
Kings Cross, London
- Ruth Borat, Chief Financial Officer, Alphabet
27-07-2023
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_112868735_EYE
Why Irish data centre boom is complicating climate efforts. Surge in processing industry will increase Ireland’s already too high carbon emissions. Google Data Centre.
The Google Data Centre
Inside Digital RealtyÕs Dublin data centre, racks of shiny black servers throb and whirr as unseen fans cool machines that steadily process unending data. It operates 24 hours a day from the business park, sited on a former orchard, and the data joins a digital torrent in an underground fibre ring network that sweeps around the Irish capital and connects to undersea cables Ð the physical backbones of the digital world. It is not just for Ireland. This is also how the UK and continental Europe accesses a lot of email, social media, online shopping, Netflix and other internet services. ÒEverything with the word smart in front of it has a data centre behind it,Ó said Ben Bryan, Digital RealtyÕs technical operations manager in Dublin.
© Patrick Bolger / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_112868733_EYE
Why Irish data centre boom is complicating climate efforts. Surge in processing industry will increase Ireland’s already too high carbon emissions. Google Data Centre.
The Google Data Centre
Inside Digital RealtyÕs Dublin data centre, racks of shiny black servers throb and whirr as unseen fans cool machines that steadily process unending data. It operates 24 hours a day from the business park, sited on a former orchard, and the data joins a digital torrent in an underground fibre ring network that sweeps around the Irish capital and connects to undersea cables Ð the physical backbones of the digital world. It is not just for Ireland. This is also how the UK and continental Europe accesses a lot of email, social media, online shopping, Netflix and other internet services. ÒEverything with the word smart in front of it has a data centre behind it,Ó said Ben Bryan, Digital RealtyÕs technical operations manager in Dublin.
© Patrick Bolger / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_112868775_EYE
Why Irish data centre boom is complicating climate efforts. Surge in processing industry will increase Ireland’s already too high carbon emissions. Google Data Centre.
The Google Data Centre
Inside Digital RealtyÕs Dublin data centre, racks of shiny black servers throb and whirr as unseen fans cool machines that steadily process unending data. It operates 24 hours a day from the business park, sited on a former orchard, and the data joins a digital torrent in an underground fibre ring network that sweeps around the Irish capital and connects to undersea cables Ð the physical backbones of the digital world. It is not just for Ireland. This is also how the UK and continental Europe accesses a lot of email, social media, online shopping, Netflix and other internet services. ÒEverything with the word smart in front of it has a data centre behind it,Ó said Ben Bryan, Digital RealtyÕs technical operations manager in Dublin.
© Patrick Bolger / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_112868774_EYE
Why Irish data centre boom is complicating climate efforts. Surge in processing industry will increase Ireland’s already too high carbon emissions. Google Data Centre.
The Google Data Centre
Inside Digital RealtyÕs Dublin data centre, racks of shiny black servers throb and whirr as unseen fans cool machines that steadily process unending data. It operates 24 hours a day from the business park, sited on a former orchard, and the data joins a digital torrent in an underground fibre ring network that sweeps around the Irish capital and connects to undersea cables Ð the physical backbones of the digital world. It is not just for Ireland. This is also how the UK and continental Europe accesses a lot of email, social media, online shopping, Netflix and other internet services. ÒEverything with the word smart in front of it has a data centre behind it,Ó said Ben Bryan, Digital RealtyÕs technical operations manager in Dublin.
© Patrick Bolger / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_112868772_EYE
Why Irish data centre boom is complicating climate efforts. Surge in processing industry will increase Ireland’s already too high carbon emissions. Google Data Centre.
The Google Data Centre
Inside Digital RealtyÕs Dublin data centre, racks of shiny black servers throb and whirr as unseen fans cool machines that steadily process unending data. It operates 24 hours a day from the business park, sited on a former orchard, and the data joins a digital torrent in an underground fibre ring network that sweeps around the Irish capital and connects to undersea cables Ð the physical backbones of the digital world. It is not just for Ireland. This is also how the UK and continental Europe accesses a lot of email, social media, online shopping, Netflix and other internet services. ÒEverything with the word smart in front of it has a data centre behind it,Ó said Ben Bryan, Digital RealtyÕs technical operations manager in Dublin.
© Patrick Bolger / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_109146483_EYE
Extinction Rebellion demo Google
XR Extinction Rebellion Demo outside google in Kings Cross.
© Graeme Robertson / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_109146486_EYE
Extinction Rebellion demo Google
XR Extinction Rebellion Demo outside google in Kings Cross.
© Graeme Robertson / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_109146482_EYE
Extinction Rebellion demo Google
XR Extinction Rebellion Demo outside google in Kings Cross.
© Graeme Robertson / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_109146484_EYE
Extinction Rebellion demo Google
XR Extinction Rebellion Demo outside google in Kings Cross.
© Graeme Robertson / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_109146487_EYE
Extinction Rebellion demo Google
XR Extinction Rebellion Demo outside google in Kings Cross.
© Graeme Robertson / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_109146485_EYE
Extinction Rebellion demo Google
XR Extinction Rebellion Demo outside google in Kings Cross.
© Graeme Robertson / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_109146481_EYE
Extinction Rebellion demo Google
XR Extinction Rebellion Demo outside google in Kings Cross.
© Graeme Robertson / Guardian / eyevine
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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.
© Johnny Savage / Guardian / eyevine
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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.
© Johnny Savage / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
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.
© Johnny Savage / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/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
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/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
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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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
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/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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(FOTO: DUKAS/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_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.
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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.
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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_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_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_108506311_EYE
Kings Cross redevelopment in London.People at King’s Cross site express unease about facial recognition. One person reassured by the technology but most echo the complaint that ‘it’s unjustified’
Google's new London headquarters site at KingÕs Cross station. People at KingÕs Cross site express unease about facial recognition
This article is more than 1 month old
One person reassured by the technology but most echo the complaint that ÔitÕs unjustifiedÕ.
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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_101483131_EYE
Christopher Wylie
Christopher Wylie / Chris Wylie photographed at Swedish fashion chain H&M in the offices and showroom on New Oxford Street, London where he now works as a head of research. Wylie, who helped found the data firm Cambridge Analytica and worked there until 2014, in London, March 12, 2018. According to Wylie, preferences in clothing and music are the leading indicators of political leaning, and fashion profiling played a bigger role in the 2016 U.S. presidential election than anyone realized.
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DUKAS_101548542_EYE
Christopher Wylie
Christopher Wylie / Chris Wylie photographed at Swedish fashion chain H&M in the offices and showroom on New Oxford Street, London where he now works as a head of research. Wylie, who helped found the data firm Cambridge Analytica and worked there until 2014, in London, March 12, 2018. According to Wylie, preferences in clothing and music are the leading indicators of political leaning, and fashion profiling played a bigger role in the 2016 U.S. presidential election than anyone realized.
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DUKAS_101548543_EYE
Christopher Wylie
Christopher Wylie / Chris Wylie photographed at Swedish fashion chain H&M in the offices and showroom on New Oxford Street, London where he now works as a head of research. Wylie, who helped found the data firm Cambridge Analytica and worked there until 2014, in London, March 12, 2018. According to Wylie, preferences in clothing and music are the leading indicators of political leaning, and fashion profiling played a bigger role in the 2016 U.S. presidential election than anyone realized.
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DUKAS_101548538_EYE
Christopher Wylie
Christopher Wylie / Chris Wylie photographed at Swedish fashion chain H&M in the offices and showroom on New Oxford Street, London where he now works as a head of research. Wylie, who helped found the data firm Cambridge Analytica and worked there until 2014, in London, March 12, 2018. According to Wylie, preferences in clothing and music are the leading indicators of political leaning, and fashion profiling played a bigger role in the 2016 U.S. presidential election than anyone realized.
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DUKAS_101548540_EYE
Christopher Wylie
Christopher Wylie / Chris Wylie photographed at Swedish fashion chain H&M in the offices and showroom on New Oxford Street, London where he now works as a head of research. Wylie, who helped found the data firm Cambridge Analytica and worked there until 2014, in London, March 12, 2018. According to Wylie, preferences in clothing and music are the leading indicators of political leaning, and fashion profiling played a bigger role in the 2016 U.S. presidential election than anyone realized.
© Pal Hansen / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_101548539_EYE
Christopher Wylie
Christopher Wylie / Chris Wylie photographed at Swedish fashion chain H&M in the offices and showroom on New Oxford Street, London where he now works as a head of research. Wylie, who helped found the data firm Cambridge Analytica and worked there until 2014, in London, March 12, 2018. According to Wylie, preferences in clothing and music are the leading indicators of political leaning, and fashion profiling played a bigger role in the 2016 U.S. presidential election than anyone realized.
© Pal Hansen / Guardian / eyevine
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