A US government official has called Anthropic a national security risk, after the company drew ethical lines around its technology being used for mass domestic surveillance and fully autonomous weapons. How comfortable would you be with AI firing missiles?

Plus, Facebook's parent company, Meta, sold seven million pairs of AI-enabled Ray-Bans last year. And now they want to add facial recognition. How will that change public spaces?

And, Microsoft tried to ban the word 'microslop'. It didn't go well.

GUESTS:

Seamus Byrne — tech reporter and PhD research candidate with the ARC Centre of Excellence in Automated Decision Making & Society.

Hannah Geremia — digital content editor at Whistleout Singapore.

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<p>A US government official has called Anthropic a national security risk, after the company drew ethical lines around its technology being used for mass domestic surveillance and fully autonomous weapons. How comfortable would you be with AI firing missiles?</p><p>Plus, Facebook's parent company, Meta, sold seven million pairs of AI-enabled Ray-Bans last year. And now they want to add facial recognition. How will that change public spaces?</p><p>And, Microsoft tried to ban the word 'microslop'. It didn't go well.</p><p>GUESTS:</p><p>Seamus Byrne — tech reporter and PhD research candidate with the ARC Centre of Excellence in Automated Decision Making &amp; Society.</p><p>Hannah Geremia — digital content editor at Whistleout Singapore.</p>