AI Creates 40,000 Potential Chemical Weapon Compounds in Six Hours

49
AI Creates 40,000 Potential Chemical Weapon Compounds in Six Hours
AI Creates 40,000 Potential Chemical Weapon Compounds in Six Hours

Africa-Press – Liberia. An AI Machine learning model has created over 40,000 virtual molecules that could be used for chemical weapons in under six hours. In a paper published in Nature Machine Intelligence, Collaborations Pharmaceuticals, Inc. described how they used their MegaSyn machine learning model to create potentially deadly molecules with ease.

The model is normally used to help create potential therapeutic drugs by weeding out toxic molecules before scientists synthesize them. Collaboration Pharmaceuticals simply flipped that on its head by adding publicly available toxicity databases and instructing the AI to reward for toxicity, rather than weed it out.

Among the 40,000 compounds, false positives are likely present. But the AI independently created several already-known deadly compounds without them being in the original dataset. This suggests that most of the compounds are likely toxic.

In an interview with The Verge, Fabio Urbina, the paper’s lead author and a senior scientist at Collaborations Pharmaceuticals, stated that his company has no desire or plans to synthesize the chemicals to fully test the experiment’s efficiency.

That, fortunately, wouldn’t be all they need to create a deadly chemical weapon. The AI only creates virtual molecules, someone would still have to synthesize them. But as Urbina also points out, that may not be as hard as one might think.

Despite the potential threat, Urbina does not argue for ending open-source knowledge sharing or a heavily regulated AI market. Instead, he argues that keeping track of who is using your data when it is potentially dangerous could be a good first step. He also argues that machine learning scientists should be taught about the potential dangers of misuse, much like chemistry students are.

For More News And Analysis About Liberia Follow Africa-Press

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here