Latest in Science

Image credit: iLexx via Getty Images

Watch leading thinkers debate the risks and rewards of AI

Jaron Lanier and Martine Rothblatt will address our darkest AI fears today at 7PM ET.

89 Shares
Share
Tweet
Share
Save
iLexx via Getty Images

The advent of artificial intelligence is as dreaded as it is lauded. Proponents believe it's a technological advancement that will augment humans in unprecedented ways -- think immortality and super-intelligence. But the critics often point out the dangerous repercussions of this revolution -- autonomous weapon systems and self aware bots. Should we brace ourselves for a robotic apocalypse? Is that idea based on science fiction or reality? Does the fear of AI slow down the progress of a technology that could amplify human existence? Tune in tonight, March 9, at 7 PM ET for a riveting debate -- "Don't trust the promise of artificial intelligence."

Jaron Lanier, renowned computer scientist, virtual reality pioneer and author of bestsellers Who Owns the Future? and You Are Not a Gadget will be highlighting the risks of AI, along with Andrew Keen, author of The Internet is Not the Answer.

While Martine Rothblatt, founder of United Therapeutics and Sirius Radio, who is a proponent of technological immortality and the creator of BINA48, a "sentient humanoid" modeled after her wife, will be focusing on the benefits of AI. As will James Hughes, executive director of the Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies. He is author of Citizen Cyborg: Why Democratic Societies Must Respond to the Redesigned Human of the Future.

The live event is organized by Intelligence Squared U.S. Debated, a non-partisan, nonprofit organization that has hosted over 100 debates with leading thinkers and creators. The discussion, moderated by ABC News correspondent John Donvan, is being co-presented by 92Y, a center for arts and innovation in New York City since 1874.

Watch this space to hear some of the most prominent voices on both sides of the AI debate. Until then, you can cast your vote here.

Mona is an arts and culture journalist with a focus on technology. Before moving to New York City for a masters program at Columbia Journalism School, she was the associate editor of Platform magazine in Delhi, India. She has covered dance music extensively and is a proponent of drug policy reform. On weekends, when she’s not watching post-apocalyptic films, she spends hours contemplating life as a Buddhist.
89 Shares
Share
Tweet
Share
Save
Comments

From around the web