“ Take gorillas for example – the reason they are going extinct is not because humans are actively hostile towards them, but because we control the environments in ways that suit us, but are detrimental to their survival. ”
Humanity’s last invention and our uncertain future – Research – University of Cambridge
“Think how it might be to compete for resources with the dominant species,” says Price. “Take gorillas for example – the reason they are going extinct is not because humans are actively hostile towards them, but because we control the environments in ways that suit us, but are detrimental to their survival.”
Fear Not, Meatsacks: Cambridge Tackling Killer Robots, Other ‘Existential Risks’ | Betabeat
« The seriousness of these risks is difficult to assess, but that in itself seems a cause for concern, given how much is at stake.»
« Our technological progress has by and large replaced evolution as the dominant, future-shaping
« Our technological progress has by and large replaced evolution as the dominant, future-shaping
Humanity’s last invention and our uncertain future
Humanity’s last invention and our uncertain future
‘Terminator centre’ at Cambridge University to save us all from robots | Metro.co.uk
By METRO REPORTER - 26 November, 2012 inShare 2 'Terminator centre' at Cambridge University to save us all from robots The Terminator warned: 'I'll be back!' But researchers at Cambridge University plan to be ready for him, as it opens a centre for 'Terminator studies' to combat the threats to humanity by killer robots. Read more: http://www.metro.co.uk/news/918974-terminator-centre-at-cambridge-university-to-save-us-all-from-robots#ixzz2DkUNeyOW
Institute for Responsible Technology -
the most comprehensive source of GMO heath risk information on the web
Cambridge to study technology\’s risk to humans – Technology on NBCNews.com
Could computers become cleverer than humans and take over the world? Or is that just the stuff of science fiction?
Google’s scary powerful Spanner database gets us one step closer to Skynet | VentureBeat
Spanner isn’t quite Skynet — the self-aware artificial intelligence system in the Terminator movies — but it does show how far we’ve come at building connected systems and databases. “When there are outages, things just sort of flip — client machines access other servers in the system,” Google software engineer Andrew Fikes told Wired. “It’s a much easier service story. … The system responds — and not a human.”