
You knew this day would come: The day when your robot, an intelligent and self-aware machine, starts thinking independently from you; begins to question, or even resent, the morality that it has been trained to execute; starts to think of itself in first person ⊠What then?

We could be responsible for creating a new type of thinking thing that feels itself morally constrained
Hired in 2017 from New 91ŃÇÉ« (NYU), Professor Regina Rini, in the Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies, has already worked her way around the questions that would keep most people awake at night.
In this Q&A with Brainstorm, Rini paints a vivid picture of how we might create a âgoodâ robot and what could go horribly wrong. Few people are better equipped to tackle these quintessential questions. Rini, a member of Vision: Science to Application (VISTA), represents the next generation of AI leaders at 91ŃÇÉ«.

Regina Rini
Q: If intelligent machines or robots could make choices, could these choices be moral? And if so, how does a machine learn morality?
A: You can either approach this as: our morality is the same as a machineâs morality. Then it becomes a technical problem: How do you train robots to do what we would do?
The other way of thinking is: Since theyâre not us, we need to reverse the question. Is there some other approach to machine ethics that would not be true, necessarily, for us? Thatâs the starting point. And I donât think thereâs an obvious conclusion.
Right now, itâs not too late to be asking these questions. However, at some future point, I suspect that the development of AI is going to be so quick that it will be too late. The machines will be making the decisions themselves, or the engineers, competing against other companies or governments, wonât stop to think about the ethics anymore.
âRobots may think of people as replaceable. It wouldnât matter if one resident in a seniorsâ home dies, so long as someone else, whoâs vaguely similar, is there to replace them.â â Regina Rini
Q: Youâve said that our morality is rooted in the fact that we are born, we procreate and we die. Intelligent machines could, technically, exist forever. How, then, would morality differ between robots and humans?
A: Itâs not clear that death would be the same thing for robots as it is for us. Itâs possible that robots will not regard their running of the program as "life" or "existence." They might think: "I am one of the copies of this program." But it wonât matter if the copy survives, so long as the program does.
If this comes to pass ̶  and I am speculating ̶  then robots wonât care about the preservation of any one entity. They may think of people as replaceable. For example, it wouldnât matter if one resident in a seniorsâ home dies, so long as someone else, whoâs vaguely similar, is there to replace them.
This depends on if we train robots to model their thinking around what we care about  ̶  that is, the idea that each person is special and irreplaceable. We would need to build this into how they learn to think.

The development of AI could be so quick that it will be too late. The machines will be making the decisions themselves.
Q: When will robots be self-aware?
A: At some point in the next 50 years, weâre going to reach a point where weâre regularly interacting with computer programs that seem self-aware to us, but weâre not going to be sure. Think about Siri, but a lot smarter: Where Siri can have a chat or even joke with you, where Siri seems to give you consistent answers to questions, where Siri seems to have preferences, where Siri passes the Turing Test. English computer scientist, mathematician, cryptanalyst and philosopher, Alan Turing developed a test: If you canât tell the difference between a computer program and a person in conversation, then the computer program counts as intelligent, or like a person. It can pass as a person.

Alan Turning. Credit NPL/Science Museum (UK)
I believe weâre going to reach a point where our phones regularly pass the Turing Test. But at that point, I suspect weâre going to say, âTheyâre just phones. Theyâre not really aware. It canât actually be a person. Itâs just cleaver natural language processing.â It would be very hard for us to reach a different conclusion, to think of them as anything but our tools, after having used these personal assistants to do our bidding for decades.
This raises an interesting question: When we regularly confront machines that pass the Turing Test, will we revisit the test?
Q: Please explain your statement: âIf weâre getting it right, robots should be like us. If weâre getting it wrong, they should be better.â
A: According to some philosophers, such as Princeton Universityâs Peter Singer, we are limited, morally speaking. We only care about people close to us, our family, our children, people from our own country, those who are of a similar socio-economic class to us. Thatâs morally criticisable, even though we are biologically programmed, through evolution, to protect our children.
If you agree that this is a mistake, and we should be caring for all children not just our own offspring, then we could program robots to be better than us in this way. Robots could be free of this restriction.
Q: How could this go terribly wrong?
A: Following Singerâs argument, we need to consider what if, for example, our robocar must decide between killing other peopleâs children in the street or swerving into a ditch to avoid this, but in the process killing our own children in the car? The robocar may select the latter because it would not prioritize our own children or the owner of the car.
I donât think weâre going to allow that to happen. Robocars will follow a consumer choice model wherein if you buy a robocar, you can claim, "This car is going to privilege me. Itâs not going to sacrifice me and my family to protect other people. Iâm not buying a robocar if it will kill me to save other people." This, however, assumes that we can control them. We may get to a point where we canât keep track of their activities or understand their choices.
The robocar debate has now entered public discussion among regulators and car company executives.
âVISTA is a wonderful forum to launch AI discussions. Through 91ŃÇÉ«âs established openness to have these conversations and the resources of the city, this University is a well-situated environment for AI.â â Regina Rini
Q: You have said that the first existential robot will suffer. Please explain.

Robots may one day think: This moral code, imposed on me by these creatures that arenât like me, was primarily designed to serve them. Maybe that doesnât fit me?
A: If we try to rigidly control robots where they are confined to our conception of morality, and do exactly what we would do, and if they develop some self-awareness, then they will think:"This moral code, imposed on me by these creatures that arenât like me, was primarily designed to serve them. Maybe that doesnât fit me?"
My worry is not the science fiction worry where the robots rebel and kill us all. My worry is about what it would be like to be that "person" [self-aware robot] whose thinking has been constrained such that they cannot deviate from what people want them to do. This would be a source of pain. If this happens, we would be responsible for creating a new type of thinking thing that feels itself constrained. This is a real problem that we should try to avoid.
Q: What is 91ŃÇÉ«âs contribution to the AI discussion?
A: At 91ŃÇÉ«, thereâs a great deal of interest in AI and, in particular, related to the social side of AI. Asking questions like: What are the right ethical choices for artificial minds? How will people react? What are the legal and economic implications?
Iâve experienced great willingness to have these kinds of conversations at 91ŃÇÉ«. VISTA is a wonderful forum to launch these discussions. Thatâs very promising, especially given Torontoâs status as a centre for AI research and foundational work on machine learning.
Through 91ŃÇÉ«âs established openness to have these conversations and the resources of the city, this University is a well-situated environment for AI.
For more information on Riniâs work, visit her . Her award-winning 2017 essay is called â.â
To learn more about Research & Innovation at 91ŃÇÉ«, follow us at , watch the and see the .
By Megan Mueller, manager, research communications, Office of the Vice-President Research & Innovation, 91ŃÇÉ«, muellerm@yorku.ca
