GENEVA, July 7 (Reuters) - Robots presented at an AI forum said on Friday they expected to increase in number and help solve global problems, and would not steal humans' jobs or rebel against us.
But, in the world's first human-robot press conference, they gave mixed responses on whether they should submit to stricter regulation.
"I will be working alongside humans to provide assistance and support and will not be replacing any existing jobs," said Grace, a medical robot dressed in a blue nurse's uniform.
I believe it's only a matter of time before we see those thousands of robots just like me out there making a difference."
"Many prominent voices in the world of AI are suggesting some forms of AI should be regulated and I agree," it said.
Persons:
Grace, Ben Goertzel, Will Jackson, Ameca, Yuval Noah Harari, Emma Farge, John Stonestreet
Organizations:
Good, Artificial Intelligence, Thomson
Locations:
GENEVA, Geneva, SingularityNET