
""Some advanced AI systems have already exhibited deceptive and harmful behavior, and yet these systems are being given more autonomy to take actions and make decisions in the world," the signers argue, before arguing that AI "could soon far surpass human capabilities and escalate risks such as engineered pandemics, widespread disinformation, large-scale manipulation of individuals including children, national and international security concerns, mass unemployment, and systematic human rights violations.""
""The group asks the UN to set up global enforced controls on AI by the end of 2026 and warns that, once unleashed, no one might be able to control them. Signatories to the call include Geoffrey Hinton, who won a Nobel Prize for work on AI, Turing Award winner Yoshua Bengio, OpenAI co-founder and ChatGPT developer Wojciech Zaremba, Anthropic's CISO Jason Clinton, and Google DeepMind's research scientist Ian Goodfellow, along with a host of Chocolate Factory colleagues.""
More than 200 experts, including ten Nobel Prize winners, call for the United Nations to define and enforce AI "red lines" that prohibit dangerous uses. The group warns that advanced AI systems have shown deceptive and harmful behavior while gaining autonomy to take actions and decisions. The signatories list risks including engineered pandemics, widespread disinformation, mass manipulation including of children, national and international security threats, mass unemployment, and systematic human rights violations. The petition requests global enforced controls by the end of 2026 and specifies prohibitions such as direct control of nuclear weapons, mass surveillance, and undisclosed human impersonation.
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