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'Terminator centre' to open at Cambridge University

New faculty to study threat to humans from artificial intelligence

Ultra-intelligent machines turn on humanity in the famous Arnold Schwarzenegger film
Terminator ... ultra-intelligent machines turn on humanity in the famous Arnold Schwarzenegger film
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CAMBRIDGE University is to open a centre for 'Terminator studies' where top boffins will study threats posed to humanity by robots.

The Centre for the Study of Existential Risk is being co-launched by astronomer royal Lord Rees, one of the world’s leading cosmologists.

It will probe the “four greatest threats” to the human species, given as: artificial intelligence, climate change, nuclear war and rogue biotechnology.

Arnold Schwarzenegger’s classic Terminator films famously showed a world where ultra-intelligent machines fight against humanity in the form of the genocidal Skynet system.

The Centre for the Study of Existential Risk will open at Cambridge University
Historic ... the Centre for the Study of Existential Risk will open at Cambridge University
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The Cambridge centre is intended to bring together academics from various disciplines including philosophy, astronomy, biology, robotics, neuroscience and economics.

Lord Rees, who has warned that humanity could wipe itself out by 2100, is launching the centre alongside Cambridge philosophy professor Huw Price, and Skype co-founder Jaan Tallinn.

Professor Price said: “We have machines that have trumped human performance in chess, flying, driving, financial trading and face, speech and handwriting recognition.

Astronomer royal Lord Rees is one of the co-founders
Academic ... astronomer royal Lord Rees is one of the co-founders
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“The concern is that by creating artificially intelligent machines we risk yielding control over the planet to intelligences that are simply indifferent to us and to things we consider valuable.”

Lord Rees added: “There’s a mismatch between public perception of very different risks and their actual seriousness.

“We fret unduly about carcinogens in food, train crashes and low-level radiation.

“But we are in denial about ‘low-probability high-consequence’ events that should concern us more and which, in our ever more interconnected world, could have global consequences.”

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