Threats by artificial intelligence to human health and human existence.

Journal: BMJ global health
Published Date:

Abstract

While artificial intelligence (AI) offers promising solutions in healthcare, it also poses a number of threats to human health and well-being via social, political, economic and security-related determinants of health. We describe three such main ways misused narrow AI serves as a threat to human health: through increasing opportunities for control and manipulation of people; enhancing and dehumanising lethal weapon capacity and by rendering human labour increasingly obsolescent. We then examine self-improving 'artificial general intelligence' (AGI) and how this could pose an existential threat to humanity itself. Finally, we discuss the critical need for effective regulation, including the prohibition of certain types and applications of AI, and echo calls for a moratorium on the development of self-improving AGI. We ask the medical and public health community to engage in evidence-based advocacy for safe AI, rooted in the precautionary principle.

Authors

  • Frederik Federspiel
    Global Health and Development, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, UK.
  • Ruth Mitchell
    International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War, Malden, Massachusetts, USA.
  • Asha Asokan
    Independent Researcher/Consultant (Human Rights, International Peace and Security), Washington, DC, USA.
  • Carlos Umana
    Co-President, International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War (IPPNW), San José, Costa Rica.
  • David McCoy
    Department of Radiology and Biomedical Imaging, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, USA.