The huge advances in artificial ielligence have created a lot of competition between couries to use this technology in their military and weapons sectors, but according to Jeffrey Hion, the godfather of artificial ielligence and Nobel laureate, the day artificial ielligence threatens human life, couries will fight against it. This technology will unite.
According to Insider’s report, Geoffrey Hion said last week at a seminar at the Royal Swedish Academy of Engineering Sciences: “When it comes to threats like lethal autonomous weapons, couries will not cooperate. Couries are currely building lethal autonomous weapons and the speed (production of these weapons) will not slow down.” Hion believes that the human race will unite to fight the threat posed by a super-iellige form of artificial ielligence.
Commes of the godfather of artificial ielligence about the future of this technology
Geoffrey Hion says about the future that may not be too far away:
“When (AI) gets smarter than us, which almost every researcher I know believes it will, we just don’t agree on when that will happen, 5 years or 30 years from now, whether they’ll be in corol. and considering that we ourselves were their creators, is there anything we can do to preve this from happening? We will cooperate in this field; Because no coury was this to happen.”

He cites China as an example: “The Chinese Communist Party also does not wa to hand over power to artificial ielligence.” Hion said this iernational cooperation can resemble the Cold War. A war where Russia and the United States, despite being enemies, shared the goal of avoiding nuclear war.
Citing similar concerns, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman asked world leaders to form an “iernational agency” similar to the Atomic Energy Agency to review the most powerful AI models and ensure their safety.
Altman said in a podcast about this: “I think that sometime in the not-too-dista future, advanced artificial ielligence systems can cause significa global damage, but we’re not talking about decades to come.”
However, according to a report by Goldman Sachs, global investme in AI is expected to reach $200 billion by 2025, with the United States and China leading the way in military-to-arms AI.



