Young people are viewing “dehumanising content”, including extreme pornography - says Mr Jukes - and being asked in online groups “to prove themselves by producing more and more extreme content”.
This includes terrorist material created using artificial intelligence, he says, with gaming being one of the “gateways” into extremism online.
The age profile of those drawn into this extreme environment is coming down - and he worries about “very young people who only need to take up a knife or use a vehicle as a weapon to carry out a deadly attack”.
Nearly one in five of those arrested as terror suspects in the UK in the past year were under 18.
Didn't spot the AI part. This has to be the most retarded and pathetic attempt to try to shift and deflect blame onto unrelated target areas that they want to control.
This is just them fishing for an excuse for the government to spy absolutely every interraction you have with a computer.
Search engine input? They want to track you. AI-generating querries? They want to track you. What videos you watch, pages you read, e-mails you read and send, they want to track that too. Everything you say on chat during games too.
Yet. They probably think they have enough control on it that nothing needs to be outlawed at this point but if/when enough open source alternatives spring up suddenly it will "pose" a threat.
FTA:
Didn't spot the AI part. This has to be the most retarded and pathetic attempt to try to shift and deflect blame onto unrelated target areas that they want to control.
This is just them fishing for an excuse for the government to spy absolutely every interraction you have with a computer.
Search engine input? They want to track you. AI-generating querries? They want to track you. What videos you watch, pages you read, e-mails you read and send, they want to track that too. Everything you say on chat during games too.
Funny how they go after "gaming" but there are no calls to ban "dangerous AIs".
Yet. They probably think they have enough control on it that nothing needs to be outlawed at this point but if/when enough open source alternatives spring up suddenly it will "pose" a threat.
Oh there definitely are.