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The First-Ever International Killer Robots Summit Was a Human Rights Flop

At the first-ever REAIM summit, 50 countries agreed to a "call to action" to responsibly build AI military tech. Rights groups say it was a complete disaster.

Over 2,500 people attended REAIM, the first-of-its-kind international AI weapons summit 

Screenshot: REAIM/YouTube
Screenshot: REAIM/YouTube

The REAIM summit may have failed to appease rights groups but it largely succeeded bringing a wide variety of stakeholders to the table. Hosted in The Hague by The Netherlands and South Korea, the international summit was seen by some as an important first step to get stakeholders, some of which are actively competing against one another in an AI arm race, to meet under one roof and discuss the most pressing challenges presented by AI weapons system. In total, around 2,500 attendees from 100 different countries attended the summit.

Dutch Foreign Minister Wopke Hoekstra told Reuters at the start of the summit the event sought to agree upon some definition around AI weapons and discuss ways to improve safety under the assumption nations would inevitably pursue autonomous warfare. In general, the stakeholders involved sought to push discussions of AI weapons higher up on each respective nation’s political agenda.

“We are moving into a field that we do not know, for which we do not have guidelines, rules, frameworks, or agreements. But we will need them sooner rather than later,” Hoekstra told Reuters.

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