While there is fierce debate over the real-world capabilities of driverless cars, there is one area where there is broad support for keeping artificial intelligence (AI) at bay: weapons that can target and fire without human oversight. Here, Marks states that cue more headlines about AI and death last week with the announcement of a threatened boycott of KAIST, a South Korean university, over fears it would work on such weapons. More than 50 AI and robotics experts said they would stop collaborating with it if this were the case and the spark caused was KAIST establishing a research centre on AI and national defence, with arms firm Hanwha Systems as sponsor where the boycott signatories demanded that the institution does not "develop autonomous weapons lacking meaningful human control".
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