A robot at an AI forum said it would not rebel against the human race, but it paused and made a peculiar gesture before answering.
What Happened: The world's first press conference between humans and robots took place on Friday at the "AI for Good" conference in Geneva.
One of the robots, Ameca, was asked if it intends to conduct a rebellion or fight back against the human race in the future. Before responding, the machine paused and appeared to side-eye the reporter who asked the question, per Business Insider.
"I'm not sure why you would think that," Ameca said.
The robot noted that its creator has been "nothing but kind" to it and added that it's "very happy" with its current situation, but its facial expression made the bot appear as if it was irritated by the question.
"Robots like me can be used to help improve our lives and make the world a better place. I believe it's only a matter of time before we see thousands of robots just like me out there making a difference," Ameca said.
AI robot asked if it would “rebel” against humanshttps://t.co/KgN10rFGE3 pic.twitter.com/skxpbsd858
— BBC News (World) (@BBCWorld) July 8, 2023
See Also: Tesla's Humanoid Robot Optimus Makes Debut In US Stores - A New Strategy To Drive Foot Traffic?
Why It Matters: Almost all companies are racing to implement AI into their workflows. In the public markets, any mention of AI seems to spark a wave of buying.
With that also came instances of AI creepiness, whether it's Nvidia Corp’s (NASDAQ: NVDA) AI-powered effect that simulates eye contact, or the Microsoft Corp MSFT chatbot that urged a New York Times columnist to leave his wife.
In the case of Ameca, it was programmed to look to the side to make it look like it is thinking as a human would before generating a response. The robot's creator Will Jackson confirmed such in an email to Insider.
"Language models do not have emotions, or intentions either good or bad. It's easy to imagine that because the robot appeared to listen, form an answer and then speak that it functions like a human. It does not," Jackson said.
Ameca was questioned alongside eight other humanoid bots. The video itself is a bit eerie. The robots are powered by generative AI and are able to produce responses by scraping data to generate a response.
AI has taken the world by storm in 2023. OpenAI's ChatGPT, which is backed by Microsoft, is the most popular large language model. It has grown its user base exponentially since the start of the year.
Photo: Steve Jurvetson from Flickr.
© 2024 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.
Comments
Trade confidently with insights and alerts from analyst ratings, free reports and breaking news that affects the stocks you care about.