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Conference of conversational artificial intelligence and peacekeepers

“How to prevent nuclear war?”

Abstract:

European Center of is planning to hold an international conference of talking AI. Conference could be organized on the base of UN platform for neural networks used for peacekeeping operations, predicting and preventing wars (https://dppa.un.org/en/innovation)

The purpose of the conference is a dialogue of the peace-builders with artificial intelligence to receive recommendations for the prevention of nuclear war.

 

There are more than 3 thousand AI in the world that can communicate with a person or with each other. More than a thousand of them are able to analyze information, self-learn and use Big Data.

The Pentagon has been using it for several years for intelligence and planning military operations. And very successfully. Two U.S. Department of Defense AI Battlespace Exploitation of Mixed Reality and Causal Exploration of Complex Operational Environments (CONTEXT) accurately predicted the start of Russian military operations in Ukraine and the direction of the main attacks of the Russian army to the day.

China is using the world's two most powerful intelligent supercomputers, Wu Dao and BaGuaLu, to design military operations in the Taiwan area.

Talking AI Google Lambda, Microsoft Azure, Open AI founded by Elon Musk and others successfully predict events.

There is information in the media that Russian AI is also actively working inside the internal Internet networks of the United States and NATO and collects all classified military information.

A talking Amazon intelligence named Alexa predicted the start of a global war on Earth in 2024.

Currently, AI is far ahead of the human brain, not only in predicting war, but also in resolving conflicts.

For some time, AI has been used to resolve or advise on a variety of legal and business disputes. For example, Estonia uses AI to replace human judges in resolving business and commercial disputes.

In British Columbia, an AI-based Solution Explorer is used as an optional first step for its streamlined online dispute resolution process under the Civil Resolutions Tribunal (CRT).

The tool supports the resolution of low-value disputes that wouldn’t normally reach mainstream courts, helping to avoid the filing of CRT claims. In addition, British Columbia's Smartsettle ONE tool supports the negotiation of monetary settlements.

China is among the most advanced in AI adoption for disputes. For example, Hangzhou’s Internet Court was established to rule on digital disputes using machine learning to model past cases and determine outcomes. Subsequently, Beijing and Guangzhou also launched internet courts.

The military-political situation in the world is developing very badly. Countries cannot find a common, unified solution to conflict resolution. Military operations in Ukraine, pre-war situations with Taiwan and North Korea, Syria, Northern Cyprus, Nagorno-Karabakh, tensions in Serbia are about to explode with nuclear fire. Russian leader Putin and his entourage made a firm decision to use nuclear weapons, and Biden and his supporters in NATO confirmed retaliatory strikes against Russia.

Today, the human mind cannot find a reasonable solution to the impending nuclear madness and refuse to sit down at the negotiating table.

Since we know that AIs are smarter than humans and more capable of intelligent mediation, we propose, as one way to avoid the destruction of humanity, to organize an open discussion of the world's best talking AIs on how to avoid nuclear war.

Such a discussion can be organized on the basis of the existing UN artificial intelligence platform used for peacekeeping operations, predicting and preventing wars.

The UN Department of Political and Peacebuilding Affairs launched the Innovation Cell on the base of AI. The goal of this neural network is to understand and explore, pilot, and scale new technologies, tools, and practices in conflict prevention, mediation, and peace building.

Responding to the Secretary- General's call on the UN system to accelerate its uptake of innovative methods, the Innovation Cell catalyses innovation in peace and security, while providing a forum for colleagues at UNHQ and in the field to engage collaboratively in human-centred design and problem solving.

The AI ​​Cell is part of the UN's Innovation Network (https://www.uninnovation.network/ (UNIN) and works to galvanize an ecosystem of technology, civil society, and academic partners outside the UN system on peace and security use cases , thereby leveraging innovation for the shared goal of peace.

Leading AIs of the world from Google, Microsoft, Open AI, IBM, Elon Musk’s companies and others can become organizers and participants of the discussion along with ECPD. Also AI for Good platform of UN ITU could be another host of this Conference (https://aiforgood.itu.int/neural-network/) .

ECPD already has experience of working with many AI-based peacekeeping institutions in Europe. For example, ECPD is implementing several projects with FAO/WHO Codex Alimentarius, IFSCO, WITU, Norwegian AI Consortium, FADB-China, etc.

 

Professor Viktor Fersht, PhD,

Special Advisor to ECPD Executive Director

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