AI is more dangerous than nuclear weapons: Christopher Nolan

Los Angeles: British-American filmmaker Christopher Nolan has spoken about the increasing use of artificial intelligence (AI) in both movies and in real life, highlighting its dangers.

As his latest movie ‘Oppenheimer’ deals with the concept of nuclear weapons, Nolan has said that AI is even more dangerous than nukes.

Earlier, other big figures in Hollywood such as James Cameron, Simon Pegg, and Tom Cruise, have also spoken against AI.

While speaking to 'The Guardian', the ‘Interstellar’ director said: "To look at the international control of nuclear weapons and feel that the same principles could be applied to something that doesn't require massive industrial processes - it's a bit tricky."

“International surveillance of nuclear weapons is possible because nuclear weapons are very difficult to build. Oppenheimer spent $2 billion and used thousands of people across America to build those first bombs. It's reassuringly difficult to make nuclear weapons and so it's relatively easy to spot when a country is doing that. I don't believe any of that applies to AI,” he added.

Nolan said that the increasingly intimate relationship between AI and weaponry exposes the need for corporate accountability and much scrutiny.

He further said that the very thought of people producing or using such technology without truly understanding its implications is absolutely terrifying.

On July 20, during the special screening of ‘Oppenheimer’, the director had spoken to a bunch of scientists working in the field of AI, and they too questioned their work many times.

Many of these scientists and researchers have called the developments undertaken in their own department as their own personal ‘Oppenheimer’ moment as they ponder over the possible outcomes of such advancements in AI technology.

‘The Dark Knight’ director also went on to say that while the need for global accountability in AI control is becoming increasingly more important with advancing weapon technology as well as systems of control such as in surveillance systems, he said that “the United Nations has become a very diminished force” in controlling it.

With inputs from IANS

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