Artificial Intelligence Poses Risks of Misuse by Hackers, Researchers Say

Advertisement
By Reuters | Updated: 21 February 2018 09:37 IST
Highlights
  • Misuse of AI by rogue states, criminals, and lone-wolf attackers possible
  • It poses imminent threat to digital, physical security: Researchers
  • "Cost of attacks may be lowered by the use of AI to complete tasks"

Rapid advances in artificial intelligence are raising risks that malicious users will soon exploit the technology to mount automated hacking attacks, cause driverless car crashes or turn commercial drones into targeted weapons, a new report warns.

The study, published on Wednesday by 25 technical and public policy researchers from Cambridge, Oxford, and Yale universities along with privacy and military experts, sounded the alarm for the potential misuse of AI by rogue states, criminals, and lone-wolf attackers.

The researchers said the malicious use of AI poses imminent threats to digital, physical, and political security by allowing for large-scale, finely targeted, highly efficient attacks. The study focuses on plausible developments within five years.

Advertisement

"We all agree there are a lot of positive applications of AI," Miles Brundage, a research fellow at Oxford's Future of Humanity Institute. "There was a gap in the literature around the issue of malicious use."

Advertisement

Artificial intelligence, or AI, involves using computers to perform tasks normally requiring human intelligence, such as taking decisions or recognising text, speech or visual images.

It is considered a powerful force for unlocking all manner of technical possibilities but has become a focus of strident debate over whether the massive automation it enables could result in widespread unemployment and other social dislocations.

Advertisement

The 98-page paper cautions that the cost of attacks may be lowered by the use of AI to complete tasks that would otherwise require human labour and expertise. New attacks may arise that would be impractical for humans alone to develop or which exploit the vulnerabilities of AI systems themselves.

It reviews a growing body of academic research about the security risks posed by AI and calls on governments and policy and technical experts to collaborate and defuse these dangers.

Advertisement

The researchers detail the power of AI to generate synthetic images, text, and audio to impersonate others online, in order to sway public opinion, noting the threat that authoritarian regimes could deploy such technology.

The report makes a series of recommendations including regulating AI as a dual-use military/commercial technology.

It also asks questions about whether academics and others should rein in what they publish or disclose about new developments in AI until other experts in the field have a chance to study and react to potential dangers they might pose.

"We ultimately ended up with a lot more questions than answers," Brundage said.

The paper was born of a workshop in early 2017, and some of its predictions essentially came true while it was being written. The authors speculated AI could be used to create highly realistic fake audio and video of public officials for propaganda purposes.

Late last year, so-called "deepfake" pornographic videos began to surface online, with celebrity faces realistically melded to different bodies.

"It happened in the regime of pornography rather than propaganda," said Jack Clark, head of policy at OpenAI, the group founded by Tesla CEO Elon Musk and Silicon Valley investor Sam Altman to focus on friendly AI that benefits humanity. "But nothing about deepfakes suggests it can't be applied to propaganda."

© Thomson Reuters 2018

 

Get your daily dose of tech news, reviews, and insights, in under 80 characters on Gadgets 360 Turbo. Connect with fellow tech lovers on our Forum. Follow us on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News for instant updates. Catch all the action on our YouTube channel.

Further reading: Internet, Science, AI, Deepfake, Hacking, Tesla, OpenAI
Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. OTT Releases of the Week (Feb 16 - Feb 22): Know What to Watch This Weekend
  2. Realme P4 Lite With 6,300mAh Battery Launched at This Price in India
  3. Motorola Edge 70 Fusion India Launch Teased; Might Launch With This Chip
  4. Here's When Xiaomi Will Launch the Xiaomi 17 and Xiaomi 17 Ultra Globally
  5. Google Chrome Now Lets You Annotate PDFs, View Tabs in Split View
  6. Samsung's One UI 8.5 Update Will Bring These Useful Upgrades to Bixby
  7. Xiaomi 17T, Xiaomi 17T Tipped to Launch Four Months Earlier Than Usual
  8. Google Launches Gemini 3.1 Pro; Pomelli Updated With Photoshoot Feature
  9. Newly Discovered Tectonic Activity Is Critical for NASA's Lunar Habitats
  1. Xiaomi 17 Series Global Launch Date Announced; Xiaomi 17, Xiaomi 17 Ultra Expected to Debut
  2. Google Blocked 266 Million Risky App Installs, Prevented 1.75 Million Policy-Violating Apps in 2025
  3. Motorola Edge 70 Fusion India Launch Teased on Flipkart; Leaked Marketing Image Hints at Snapdragon 7s Gen 4 SoC
  4. Google Releases Gemini 3.1 Pro With Ability to Execute Complex Tasks; Pomelli Gets New Photoshoot Feature
  5. Xiaomi 17T Pro, Xiaomi 17T Tipped to Launch Earlier Than Previously Expected, Chipset Details Leaked
  6. Google Chrome Updated With Split View, Built-In PDF Markup Tools, and More Features
  7. Realme P4 Lite Launched in India With 6,300mAh Battery, 13-Megapixel Camera: Price, Specifications
  8. Samsung Galaxy Buds 4 Leak Again as Dummy Units Surface Online: Expected Price, Features
  9. Sony to Shut Down Demon's Souls Remake Developer Bluepoint Games in March
  10. Amazfit T-Rex Ultra 2 Launched With BioTracker 6.0 Sensor, 1.5-Inch AMOLED Display
Gadgets 360 is available in
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2026. All rights reserved.