
Unethical uses of AI need scrutiny to maintain public support: pioneers
MONTREAL — Two artificial intelligence pioneers warn that unscrupulous or unethical uses of the technology risk undermining the public image of an area of research undergoing rapid change.
Canadian deep learning “godfather” Yoshua Bengio believes the sector and governments need to address concerns including the building of so-called killer robots and development of facial recognition that can be used by authoritarian regimes to repress their citizens.
Facebook’s director of AI Research Yann LeCun adds that large companies involved in the research need to create a partnership to discuss issues such as the potential use of the technology to manipulate democracy and develop guidelines on the appropriate ways to construct, train, test and deploy discoveries.
“One danger is that the image of artificial intelligence in the public will degrade because of bad uses of AI,” LeCun told a ReWork Deep Learning Summit panel discussion in Montreal last week.