08/04/24View in Browser

The First AI War

By Georgi Gotev

Six years ago, this Brief imagined the ethical challenge that killer robots, possessing artificial intelligence and presumably looking like Terminator, would pose.

The issue has also been the focus of the European Parliament in 2018 and 2019 when MEPs called for an international ban on AI weaponry, stressing that “machines cannot make human-like decisions” and that humans should remain accountable for decisions taken during a war.

On 22 December 2023, 152 countries voted in favour of the General Assembly resolution on the dangers of lethal autonomous weapons systems, while four voted no, and 11 abstained.

Israel was among those who abstained.

Things have evolved in the meantime: Killing machines now have the abstract characteristic of an algorithm rather than the movie-friendly aspect of a humanoid robot.

UN Secretary-General António Guterres voiced serious concern on Friday (5 April) over reports that Israel was using artificial intelligence to identify targets in Gaza.

According to an investigative report by the website +972 and Local Call published two days before, the Israeli army has developed an artificial intelligence-based programme known as “Lavender”.

According to six Israeli intelligence officers, who have all served in the army during the current war on the Gaza Strip and had first-hand involvement in the use of AI to generate targets for assassination, Lavender has played a central role in the unprecedented bombing of Palestinians, especially during the early stages of the war.

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EUNAVFOR ASPIDES Operation Commander Rear Admiral Vasileios Gryparis speaks to the press with the high representative of the European Union for foreign affairs and security policy about the EU naval mission Aspides in the Red Sea in Brussels, Belgium, 08 April 2024. The EUNAVFOR ASPIDES Operation aims to restore maritime security and freedom of navigation in the Red Sea. EPA-EFE/OLIVIER MATTHYS

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The Roundup

future referendum on Catalonia’s possible independence from the rest of Spain “will cease to be unconstitutional and impossible,” similar to the imminent amnesty law for those involved in the 2017 secessionist attempt, Catalan President Pere Aragonès, of the separatist Republican Left of Catalonia (ERC) formation party, said on Monday .

Portugal became the eighth European country to adopt the front-of-pack labelling Nutriscore on Friday after the European Commission failed to unveil a proposal for an EU-wide model.

The EU’s operation in the Red Sea to protect commercial ships from attacks by Houthi rebels is showing results but remains stuck in a small area of operation due to a lack of ships and other assets, officials said on Monday.

Economic and business ministers from France, Germany, and Italy are set to sketch out plans for a sweeping  ‘omnibus’ law to cut red tape and regulatory requirements for businesses on Monday, turbo-charging industrialists’ demand for a European Industrial deal.

Adapting the French economy to climate change could cost between €5 billion and €20 billion a year by 2050, impacting buildings, road and rail transport and crop farming, according to estimates revealed by government-funded think tank I4CE on Friday.

Look out for…

  • Commission Vice President Maroš Šefčovič delivers keynote speech at ‘Future of EU industry: value chain resilience or dependence’ organised by EUROFER on Tuesday.
  • Commission VP Vĕra Jourová receives Montenegro’s Deputy PM Aleksa Bečić on Tuesday.
  • Commissioner Wopke Hoekstra chairs Clan Transition Dialogue with construction sector as part of New European Bauhaus Festival.
  • Informal meeting of agriculture ministers Monday-Tuesday.
  • European Parliament plenary in Brussels on Wednesday-Thursday.

Views are the author’s

[Edited by Zoran Radosavljevic/Alice Taylor]

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