Google Updates its AI Principles, Removing Section Pledging to Not Use the Technology for Weapons and Surveillance

CNN
Google erases promise not to use AI technology for weapons or surveillance

Google’s updated, public AI ethics policy removes its promise that it won’t use the technology to pursue applications for weapons and surveillance. In a previous version of the principles seen by CNN on the internet archive Wayback Machine, the company included applications it won’t pursue. One such category was weapons or other technology intended to injure people. Another was technology used to surveil beyond international norms. That language is gone on the updated principles page. Since OpenAI launched chatbot ChatGPT in 2022, the artificial intelligence race has advanced at a dizzying pace. While AI has boomed in use, legislation and regulations on transparency and ethics in AI have yet to catch up – and now Google seems to have loosened self-imposed restrictions. In a blog post Tuesday, senior vice president of research, labs, technology & society James Manyika and Google DeepMind head Demis Hassabis said that AI frameworks published by democratic countries have deepened Google’s “understanding of AI’s potential and risks.”

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CNN
TechCrunch
Google removes pledge to not use AI for weapons from website

Google removed a pledge to not build AI for weapons or surveillance from its website this week. The change was first spotted by Bloomberg. The company appears to have updated its public AI principles page, erasing a section titled “applications we will not pursue,” which was still included as recently as last week. Asked for comment, the company pointed TechCrunch to a new blog post on “responsible AI.” It notes, in part, “we believe that companies, governments, and organizations sharing these values should work together to create AI that protects people, promotes global growth, and supports national security.” Google’s newly updated AI principles note the company will work to “mitigate unintended or harmful outcomes and avoid unfair bias,” as well as align the company with “widely accepted principles of international law and human rights.”

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TechCrunch
Breitbart
Google Removes Pledge Not to Develop AI for Weapons and Surveillance

The Washington Post reports that in a significant shift from its earlier stance, Google has revised its AI principles, eliminating a section that outlined four “Applications we will not pursue.” Until recently, this list included weapons, surveillance, technologies likely to cause overall harm, and use cases that violate international law and human rights principles. The company declined to comment specifically on the changes to its weapons and surveillance policies. Google executives Demis Hassabis, head of AI, and James Manyika, senior vice president for technology and society, explained the update in a blog post on Tuesday. They emphasized the need for companies based in democratic countries to serve government and national security clients, given the global competition for AI leadership within an increasingly complex geopolitical landscape. The executives stated that democracies should lead AI development, guided by core values like freedom, equality, and respect for human rights.

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Google Ditches Pledge Not To Use AI For Weapons Or Surveillance
Times have changed, says Google as it gives itself permission to scrap key principles.
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Google removes pledge to not use AI for weapons, surveillance
Google has removed a pledge to abstain from using AI for potentially harmful applications. A prior version of the AI principles said Google would not use its AI technology for weapons or surveillance. "There's a global competition taking place for AI leadership within an increasingly complex geopolitical landscape," reads a blog post co-written by Demis Hassabis.
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Google puts military use of AI back on the table
Google updated its "AI principles," a document detailing how the company would and wouldn't use artificial intelligence in its products and services. The old version was split into two sections: “Objectives for AI applications” and “AI applications we will not pursue,’ and it explicitly promised not to develop AI weapons or surveillance tools.
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Google U-turns on vow to never weaponise AI as world faces new era of warfare
The move will allow Google to use its AI to develop new weapons. The technology is already being used to develop drones and self-driving cars. The move is seen as a major step in the right direction for the future of warfare. The decision was made by Google's senior vice president of AI, John Defterios.
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Google removes pledge not to use AI for weapons or surveillance
Google has apparently updated its public artificial intelligence ethics policy, eliminating a prior commitment not to use the technology for developing surveillance and weapons applications.
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Google removes pledge to not use AI for weapons, surveillance
The company updated its ‘Responsible AI’ principles, which no longer includes a pledge to not use AI for weapons or surveillance.
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Google drops pledge not to use AI for weapons or surveillance
Google changed its public AI policies to remove assertions that it would not develop AI applied to surveillance or weapons.
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Google reverses pledge to not use AI for weapons or surveillance
Google updated ethics policy this week, lifting a longstanding ban on AI being used to create weapons and conduct surveillance.
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Google drops pledge on not using AI for weapons
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Google Lifts Self-Imposed Ban on Using AI for Weapons and Surveillance
Google dropped a pledge not to use artificial intelligence for weapons and surveillance systems on Tuesday. It's just the latest sign that Big Tech is no longer concerned with the potential blowback that can come when tech companies get big, lucrative contracts to develop police surveillance tools and weapons of war.
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Google deletes policy against using AI for weapons or surveillance
Google deletes policy against using AI for use in weapons or surveillance. The policy had been in place since 2018, but has now been deleted. Google says there is a "global competition taking place for AI leadership" But it did not explicitly mention the deletion of its prohibition on AI weapons.
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