🤖 It is important who in the world will be the monastery defining technological heresy and dogma.
In any event, the competition between companies and mega-corporations, the rivalry among states, around intelligence and technology have different facets. At the national level, the club of the smartest brains is still very small, but more democratic, than the military technology club.
If a country rushes to be more significant, there is no alternative than to develop technologies and patents, with an emphasis on a certain specialisation, or all at once - if it claims to be a superpower. This resembles technological napalm.
Therefore, in terms of the logic of power, political relations between states and within states, much less has changed than in instruments. Intelligence, not artificial, but quite natural and trained, will be in maximum demand by states in matters of balancing technology and ethics, and in rule-making.
Whoever is the first to push ethical boundaries with the help of intellect and technology, and then fence them, as was the case with nuclear weapons, has a chance to succeed in fundamentally new technologies that change our way of life and political alignments, writes Anastasia Likhacheva, speaker of Session 5 of the 18th Annual Meeting of the Valdai Club, Director of the Centre for Comprehensive European and International Studies (CCEIS).
🔗 Ethics as Applied Intelligence
#VALDAI2021 #intelligence #technologies
@valdai_club — The Valdai Discussion Club
In any event, the competition between companies and mega-corporations, the rivalry among states, around intelligence and technology have different facets. At the national level, the club of the smartest brains is still very small, but more democratic, than the military technology club.
If a country rushes to be more significant, there is no alternative than to develop technologies and patents, with an emphasis on a certain specialisation, or all at once - if it claims to be a superpower. This resembles technological napalm.
Therefore, in terms of the logic of power, political relations between states and within states, much less has changed than in instruments. Intelligence, not artificial, but quite natural and trained, will be in maximum demand by states in matters of balancing technology and ethics, and in rule-making.
Whoever is the first to push ethical boundaries with the help of intellect and technology, and then fence them, as was the case with nuclear weapons, has a chance to succeed in fundamentally new technologies that change our way of life and political alignments, writes Anastasia Likhacheva, speaker of Session 5 of the 18th Annual Meeting of the Valdai Club, Director of the Centre for Comprehensive European and International Studies (CCEIS).
🔗 Ethics as Applied Intelligence
#VALDAI2021 #intelligence #technologies
@valdai_club — The Valdai Discussion Club
Valdai Club
Ethics as Applied Intelligence
An important and visual lesson from the pandemic is that technology is wonderful; it improves the quality of life, gives us new materials, communication, medicines and vaccines. It increases the quality of life and productivity. Life becomes much more comfortable.…