When All Research Is Dual Use
Governing new biosecurity threats is not merely a matter of good intentions and better training; it requires a paying proper attention to the social contexts of science. In a Mar 2022 paper in Nature Machine Intelligence, researchers from a US pharmaceutical company who were building artificial inte...
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Published in | Issues in science and technology Vol. 38; no. 3; pp. 84 - 87 |
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Main Author | |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Washington
Issues in Science and Technology
01.04.2022
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Governing new biosecurity threats is not merely a matter of good intentions and better training; it requires a paying proper attention to the social contexts of science. In a Mar 2022 paper in Nature Machine Intelligence, researchers from a US pharmaceutical company who were building artificial intelligence systems for virtual drug discovery issued a wake-up call to their colleagues. After years of working on a suite of models to improve toxicity prediction, the researchers were invited to an international security conference to give a presentation on how such models could be misused to create chemical and biological weapons--something they had not previously considered, even though they had worked with neurotoxins and Ebola. |
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ISSN: | 0748-5492 1938-1557 |