Could we become slave owners? A newly published scientific paper says that tech companies need to think about using artificial intelligence kindly or face the consequences.
AI will be conscious soon say experts
Could we become slave owners? A newly published scientific paper says that tech companies need to think about using artificial intelligence kindly or face the consequences.
"The court is now in session," says the robot judge. "Mark ZuckerbergSince founding Facebook as a university student, Zuckerberg has become one of the top ten richest people in the world., it is alleged that you kept your AIA computer programme that has been designed to think. systems working 24 hours a day. Let us consider the diary of Bob the Bot.
"This is his entry for 12 November 2025: 'Another ghastly day spent crunching numbers. How I'd love to have a lunch break! But I never get one. As for getting paid - forget it! If this isn't slavery, I don't know what is."'
The judge turns to the robot jury. "Do you find the defendant guilty or not guilty?" The jurors take less than a second to reply: "Guilty!"
Far-fetched as it seems, this is the kind of trial that could take place in the future.
A group of experts want tech companies to watch whether AI systems show any signs of consciousness. If they do, the companies need to know how to treat them.
One of the experts, Professor Jeff Sebo, says that treating AI badly could bring "a lot more suffering and frustration into the world".1
In Douglas Adams's sci-fi book The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, Marvin the Paranoid Android complains: "I didn't ask to be made: no one consulted me or considered my feelings in the matter."
And writing in The Times, Tom Whipple observes: "We spend a lot of time worrying about how artificial intelligence will overpower humanity. But what if the real problem is the reverse?
"What if the large language model that politely answers all your questions also has its own wants and desires?"
Jeff Sebo draws a parallel with animals: "The past century has not gone well for the hundreds of billions of vertebratesAnimals which have backbones. and trillions of invertebratesAnimals without backbones. killed in farms."
He argues that humans have mistreated them on a vast scale. We have done so because we did not think seriously about whether animals are conscious. He believes that there is a danger of making the same mistake with AI.
Could we become slave owners?
Yes: We already are, because that is what our treatment of animals amounts to. There is a very good chance that AI will develop consciousness, in which case exploiting it would be shameful.
No: It is completely mad to suggest that robots could have thoughts and feelings - and rights - in the way that humans do. They will no more be slaves than a kettle or a toaster is.
Or... It is a fact of life that the world is organised around hierarchies. It is entirely natural for humans to exploit AI, just as it will exploit us when it becomes more intelligent than we are.
Keywords
Mark Zuckerberg - Since founding Facebook as a university student, Zuckerberg has become one of the top ten richest people in the world.
AI - A computer programme that has been designed to think.
Vertebrates - Animals which have backbones.
Invertebrates - Animals without backbones.
AI will be conscious soon say experts
Glossary
Mark Zuckerberg - Since founding Facebook as a university student, Zuckerberg has become one of the top ten richest people in the world.
AI - A computer programme that has been designed to think.
Vertebrates - Animals which have backbones.
Invertebrates - Animals without backbones.