Google puts military use of AI back on the table

On February 4, Google updated its “AI principles,” a document detailing how the company would and wouldn’t use artificial intelligence in its products and services. The old version was split into two sections: “Objectives for AI applications” and “AI applications we will not pursue,” and it explicitly promised not to develop AI weapons or surveillance tools.

Google

The update was first noticed by The Washington Post, and the most glaring difference is the complete disappearance of any “AI applications we will not pursue” section. In fact, the language of the document now focuses solely on “what Google will do,” with no promises at all about “what Google won’t do.”

Recommended Videos

Why is this significant? Well, if you say you won’t pursue AI weapons, then you can’t pursue AI weapons. It’s pretty cut and dry. However, if you say you will employ “rigorous design, testing, monitoring, and safeguards to mitigate unintended or harmful outcomes and avoid unfair bias,” then you can pursue whatever you want and just argue that you employed rigorous safeguards.

Similarly, when Google says it will implement “appropriate human oversight,” there’s no way for us to know what that means. Google is the one who decides exactly what appropriate human oversight is. This is a problem because it means the company isn’t actually making any promises or giving us any solid information. It’s just opening things up so it can move around more freely — while still trying to give the impression of social responsibility.

Google’s involvement in the U.S. Department of Defense’s Project Maven in 2017 and 2018 is what led to the original AI principles document. Thousands of its employees protested the military project, and in response, Google did not renew the agreement and promised to stop pursuing AI weapons.

However, fast-forward a few years and most of Google’s competitors are engaging in these kinds of projects, with Meta, OpenAI, and Amazon all allowing some military use of their AI tech. With the increased flexibility of its updated AI principles, Google is effectively free to get back in the game and make some military money. It will be interesting to see if Google’s employees will have anything to say about this in the near future.

Editors’ Recommendations

  • A new government minister for AI has yet to use ChatGPT

  • OpenAI expands in Asia with Kakao and Softbank partnerships

  • ChatGPT’s latest model is finally here — and it’s free for everyone

  • The U.S. finally put its foot down on AI image copyright

  • Stargate Project: everything you need to know about OpenAI’s $500 billion gamble




Related posts

Latest posts

The Lenovo Legion gaming tablet was just released. Here’s why it is already on sale

The Lenovo Legion Tab Gen 3 is just released and is already on sale. What's up with that?

Watch the YouTube video that launched the site exactly 20 years ago

It lacks the high production values present in so many of today’s YouTube videos, but then Jawed Karim wasn’t aiming for anything slick. It was merely a little something to launch his new video streaming site. Filmed at San Diego Zoo by a friend and posted on April 23, 2005, Karim says straight to camera: […]

Watch the YouTube video that launched the site exactly 20 years ago

It lacks the high production values present in so many of today’s YouTube videos, but then Jawed Karim wasn’t aiming for anything slick. It was merely a little something to launch his new video streaming site. Filmed at San Diego Zoo by a friend and posted on April 23, 2005, Karim says straight to camera: […]

Asus CX14, CX15 Chromebook Plus announced with big displays and Google AI

Asus announced its next wave of CX14 and CX15 Chromebooks for consumers.

Fairphone is doing its part to make the world a better place. Is it enough?

It's easier for a small company to do the right thing. We need to see the same from the tech

Google paid Samsung hefty amounts of money to preinstall Gemini

Google is paying Samsung to preinstall Gemini on its devices

Rumors allege a Galaxy Tab S10 ‘Lite’ is on the way, and a Tab S11 series shake-up

Samsung is allegedly planning a new "Lite" tablet release and another shake-up for its Tab S11 series.

Google’s Earth Day 2025 Doodle shows the many sides of our big blue planet

Google explains the significance of its Earth Day 2025 doodle.

YouTube Music tests new Spotify-like lyrics sharing feature

YouTube Music is testing a new feature that allows users to share song lyrics on social media. It should likely

Most top-selling Meta Quest games all share one key trait

The top 50 best-selling Meta Quest games of all time have just been revealed, and the vast majority sport one