This military tech may soon be available to the public.
, MIT artificial intelligence and weapons researcher Max Tegmark warned that the kind of "slaughterbots" that militaries are already working hard on may soon be in the hands of civilians as well.
The greater context is even more chilling. The US, Russia, and China have all signaled that they are against an outright global ban on these so-called "legal autonomous weapons" ahead of a United Nations debate and resolution vote this week.that there is "not enough support to launch a treaty at this stage," though they're hopeful for some sort of "principles" countries will agree to on a nation-by-nation basis.
"Even if a judge has lots of bodyguards, you can fly in through a bedroom window while they’re sleeping and kill them," he continued. "And it’s going to go far beyond that. Because pretty soon anyone who wants to knock off anyone for any reason will be able to do this."reported
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