军事威胁:中国的人工智能机器人
Military Threat: China's AI Robots

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/military-threat-chinas-ai-robots

中国政府上周举行了一次大型机器人会议,强调了中国机器人行业的最新进展。 亮点包括在工厂装配线上工作的人形机器人的演示。 中国政府表示,其人形机器人正在迅速发展,人工智能已集成到一些具有军事功能的模型中。 由于有报道称中国人民解放军使用武装飞行无人机和携带枪支的四足机器人,人们对将这些机器人武器化表示担忧。 这些机器人可以自主操作,并在冲突期间构成潜在威胁。 中国在机器人领域的快速增长得益于大量投资和国家干预,在工业机器人的生产和安装方面超过了全球其他国家。 2022年,中国占全球工业机器人总量的一半,而日本和美国仅占10%左右。 2016年,一家中国公司收购了三大工业机器人制造商之一的德国库卡公司,这表明了整合趋势和可能的知识产权盗窃行为。 其他知名企业包括日本公司 Fanuc 和瑞士公司 ABB,特斯拉计划到 2025 年在其工厂引入 1,000 台人形机器人。 展示了一种新型中国双足机器人,该机器人能够独立导航崎岖地形。 当考虑到这些机器人有可能被军事化或被中国政府用于国内环境时,就会引起人们的担忧,从而侵犯人权、隐私和国家安全。 鉴于这些发展,人们越来越呼吁对机器人公司和人工智能增强设备的新兴市场进行监管和监督。 批评者警告不要在战争、间谍活动和家庭监视中滥用智能机器,并强调需要负责任地开发和部署先进的机器人技术。

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原文

Last week, the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) organized the World Robot Conference - where they showcased the latest advancements that China's robotics industry has produced over the past several years.

A UBTECH humanoid robot demonstrates its applications on a factory assembly line, at the World Robot Conference in Beijing, China August 21, 2024.

According to the CCP, China's humanoid robots are "catching up fast with global rivals," with advances such as the incorporation of AI into some of its robots that have military capabilities.

We're picturing mindless robot patrols enforcing the next 'welded in' pandemic lockdown, with deadl(ier) results.

As Anders Corr notes in The Epoch Times, China’s humanoid robots on display at the conference could easily be equipped with weapons and probably already have been. The People’s Liberation Army has demonstrated armed flying drones and quadruped AI robots that resemble dogs with machine guns mounted to their backs. The killer robot dogs can reportedly fire their weapons autonomously.

China’s rapid rise in robotics is state-directed and subsidized to the tune of over $1.4 billion, according to an official announcement in 2023. In 2012, China installed fewer than 15 percent of industrial robots globally. By 2022, that number increased to over 50 percent, with China installing over 250,000, the most in the world. By comparison, Japan and the United States installed just about 50,000 and 40,000, respectively.

In 2016, a Chinese company bought Germany’s Kuka, one of the world’s three leading industrial robot makers. The other two are Japan’s Fanuc and Switzerland’s ABB. Tesla is also a leading robot maker. It plans to deploy 1,000 humanoid Optimus robots in Tesla factories in 2025. Given the close connections of all four of these companies to China, there is a significant risk of technology transfers and IP theft, further driving China’s rapid rise in the robotics space.

On March 25, a Chinese company called LimX Dynamics revealed an advanced biped robot that navigates rocky, grassy, hilly, and other challenging terrains in a mountainous region of China. A video shows the biped being pulled and beaten around the legs by a trainer with a club, but it rapidly adjusts to such attacks and maintains its stance. While the robot is relatively short at just 2.5 feet, it could easily be scaled to smaller or larger sizes depending on the intelligence, military, or crowd-control application.

The regime in China has mandated that robots be human-friendly, including safeguarding human dignity and not threatening human security. It promotes robots as domestic help, caregivers to the elderly, and doctors that will reportedly treat 3,000 patients a day. However, the CCP has novel interpretations of such concepts as human rights, which it regularly subordinates to its primary goal of regime stability and the expansion of its own power.

This raises concerns about whether the CCP will use its vast number of industrial, humanoid, canine, and other robots for such authoritarian purposes, including abroad to the extent that the robots are exported. Experts are already concerned that internet-connected electric vehicles (EVs) could be hacked and transformed into remote-controlled weapons. China’s exported EVs and robots could be seen in Beijing as a dual-use sleeper army of sorts that can surveil or attack an adversary. Some of China’s domestic robots can already engage in martial arts. They could also be designed with hidden military capabilities and security backdoors that would make them hackable and militarily effective for the regime in Beijing.

This is of concern given that China is already exporting inexpensive dog robots equipped with cameras and microphones for as little as $540 each. That price puts them within reach of almost any consumer from the United States and our allies. Humanoid household helper robots can now be had for as little as $16,000 apiece. Consumers in the United States and our allies may want to purchase these robots, but experts say they could be hacked and used to harm or kill an owner.

If hacked on a mass scale, a sleeper army of insecure robots in the United States, Taiwan, or other countries could assist the CCP in extending its authoritarian influence, violating human rights, committing genocide, or executing a military conquest such as over Taiwan. U.S. robotics firms, such as Boston Dynamics, have released videos of robots that are potentially more advanced than those found in China. However, Beijing could hack these robots as well.

The CCP may be hiding its robotics capabilities as much as it hides its superior supercomputer capabilities. The CCP can use Boston Dynamics as inspiration. It has already consciously used companies with more advanced technologies, like Tesla, as a “catfish” to spur more rapid development in China.

If AI were to ever escape human control in a breakout, which many AI experts worry about, it could potentially hack many of the world’s robots and much of the world’s Internet of Things (IoT), thus expanding AI’s ability to surveil the environment and act in it physically and autonomously.

Even if the risk of an AI breakout or mass CCP hack of U.S. robots and IoT has a low probability of ever becoming a reality, its high cost is such that regulations and legislation are being proposed in the United States and elsewhere. These are meant to address what is known as a “black swan” event that is of low probability but high cost and, therefore, a risk to be mitigated.

Rep. Vern Buchanan (R-Fla.), for example, recently proposed an amendment requiring an annual Pentagon report on threats to the United States from China’s AI military technology, including armed AI robot dogs. The amendment passed the House without a single opposition vote from either party.

Deterring China’s use of the dangerous combination of AI and military robotics—and the arms race it starts—requires more than just military innovation on our part. It requires removing the CCP from its control of the world’s most powerful manufacturing base in China so that all countries can back away from the brink of developing ever more powerful and unregulated AI-enabled military robotics. Given that the CCP is averse to arms control and can’t be trusted even if it is welcomed as much, that can be done through no less than an ethical sea-change in China that most likely will require its democratization.

Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times or ZeroHedge.

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