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AI is 'a nuclear bomb and the entire world has already got it,' Palantir ethics expert warns

Palantir civil liberties engineer John Grant likened advanced artificial intelligence to a nuclear bomb the "entire world" can now access during a panel discussion this week.

An expert on artificial intelligence ethics for a company that builds software used in war zones likened the emergence of widely-available advanced AI to the atomic bomb this week, voicing concerns over how the powerful technology could be used.

"AI is a nuclear bomb and the entire world has already got it," John Grant, civil liberties engineer at AI software firm Palantir, said during a panel discussion for the Reagan Institute Summit on Education (RISE) put on by the Ronald Reagan Presidential Foundation and Institute on Thursday. 

"I'm not sure as a society we're ready to handle that very well," he explained. "We need people to take their own responsibility for how they use it — and that's a challenge."

Grant said the situation reminds him of the Twitter engineer who invented the retweet button famously saying, "We might have just handed a 4-year-old a loaded weapon."

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The civil liberties engineer is responsible for educating Palantir employees on AI ethics, and says he teaches his colleagues to identify the ethical issues with technology and how to draw boundaries to take responsibility for the effect they could have on society. Grant said the same things should be taught to kids in school, so those who are developing new technologies understand they have the power to control how it is used.

"You have to imbue in these students responsibility for what they're building and the effect on the world, and there's a dangerous tunnel vision sometimes with engineers and computer scientists where they say, ‘Hey, I’m going to build this thing and it's going to work, it's going to be cool,'" he said.

Grant told the RISE audience that one of the driving impetuses for him starting the education program at Palantir was a quote he read from Frank Oppenheimer, the brother of Robert Oppenheimer, who is credited with being the father of the atomic bomb. Both men worked on the Manhattan Project.

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Grant said Frank Oppenheimer was asked later in life how he felt about having worked on a genocidal weapon, and he replied something to the effect of, "Somehow we never thought it would be used on people."

"His response chilled me," Grant said, pointing out that the bomb was developed "in the middle of the most violent, bloody war in history."

"I'm not disparaging Oppenheimer," Grant explained, saying the physicist "was solving a mechanical problem, he was solving an engineering problem," and the broader implications weren't considered.

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"We've got to show all these engineers, all these students, it's not just the project in front of you," he reiterated. "That you have to figure out, how is it going to affect the world? And you have to say, ‘Am I happy with that or am I not happy with that, and how are we going to mitigate those negative effects?'"

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