Kalo te përmbajtja
  • EN
  • SQ
  • IT
  • FR
  • ES
  • DE
  • EL
VA-NEWS VA-NEWS
  • Home
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Health
  • Technology
  • Sport
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Travel
LIVE
Navigation

VA-NEWS

  • Home
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Health
  • Technology
  • Sport
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Travel
Shortcuts
Home Latest
LIVE
Gjuha
  • EN
  • SQ
  • IT
  • FR
  • ES
  • DE
  • EL

Search news

  1. Kryefaqja
  2. Opinion
  3. Will it take a ‘Chernobyl-scale disaster’ for us to regulate cyber weapons of mass destruction? | Stuart Russell | The Guardian
Opinion

Will it take a ‘Chernobyl-scale disaster’ for us to regulate cyber weapons of mass destruction? | Stuart Russell | The Guardian

• June 17, 2026 • 4 min read • 👁 1
◉ WhatsApp 𝕏 X
News

The AI company Anthropic has been making major headlines recently. Its trillion-dollar IPO plan and its blood feud with secretary of defense Pete Hegseth have attracted much attention, but two other events may be even more consequential.

In early June, the company posted an article describing early signs of recursive self-improvement (RSI), a process in which an AI system devises ways to increase its own intelligence, leading to a greater ability to improve itself, and so on.

Obviously, uncontrolled RSI could produce a runaway feedback loop that leads to an irreversible loss of human control. Anthropic suggested the world should “slow or temporarily pause frontier AI development”. Then on 12 June, the White House issued an export control directive banning access to Anthropic’s new frontier models, Fable 5 and Mythos 5, for all foreign nationals – including many of its own key researchers. Anthropic responded by shutting the models down altogether.

Read more:Bernie Sanders’ AI sovereign wealth fund plan is good. But we think this is better | Nathan E Sanders and Bruce Schneier | The Guardian

These two June events are closely related. A few months ago, Anthropic’s Claude Code became good enough that its leading researchers no longer write any code at all; they just describe ideas and experiments to Claude and it does all the work.

This sped up the cycle of improvement – including the improvement of Claude Code itself – to the point where the latest iteration, called Mythos 5, showed the ability to conduct end-to-end cyberattacks with no human assistance. If such systems were released without cast-iron guardrails, almost anyone in the world could attack any country’s critical infrastructure at will.

Read more:Erling Haaland scores two in World Cup debut as Norway win

These developments are only to be expected. They are symptoms of the inexorable increase in AI risk arising from the inexorable increase in AI capabilities. Yet, with the honorable exception of the UK’s AI Safety Summit in 2023, the world has largely been ignoring the risks.

The CEOs are telling us: “We’re on track to create superhuman intelligence, which has a good chance of causing human extinction.” (By “good chance” here, they mean a chance similar to the one in six chance of dying while playing Russian roulette with a loaded revolver; in this game, however, the revolver is pointed at all of our heads.) Yet governments reply: “That’s wonderful! Can we offer you a subsidy? Fast-track your permits?”

Read more:A cage-fighting arena is just what Trump’s White House lawn needed. I have a suggestion on how to use it | Marina Hyde | The Guardian

But finally, with the prospect of weapons of mass cyberdestruction in the hands of billions, the White House has reversed its deregulatory stance and suffered a rare attack of common sense.

They sputter: “Why did no one warn us about these AI systems?” Their response has been spasmodic, with an on-again, off-again executive order and now a ban on a system that had already been deployed, but the direction of travel is clear.

Read more:The Guardian view on Donald Trump’s Iran deal: a pause is not a triumph | Editorial | The Guardian

Unrestrained development of unsafe systems leads to intolerable risks. Governments can respond now, before the risks materialize, or they can wait and clean up the mess (if they still exist, that is). One leading AI CEO told me he didn’t expect serious regulation to happen until there was a “Chernobyl-scale disaster”. If that happens, of course, the AI companies can expect to be shut down immediately and perhaps permanently.

The recent changes in White House policy suggest we might not need a Chernobyl to spur real regulation, but perhaps only a Three Mile Island. The kind of regulation we need is not new: a licensing regime that requires a minimum safety standard before a system can be built and released. This is how we handle nuclear power, airplanes, buildings, elevators, hairdressers and sandwich makers. Is it too much to ask of trillion-dollar AI corporations, who claim to be building the most dangerous technology in history?

Read also
Opinion

Office workers of the world unite: it’s time to revive the three-martini lunch | Andrea Javor | The Guardian

Opinion

Trump’s war accomplished nothing – the Iran deal is proof | Kenneth Roth | The Guardian

Tags: #AI (artificial intelligence) #Anthropic #Ask #comment #Has #Mythos #Nuclear power #Opinion #Pete hegseth #Silicon valley #Trump administration

Journalist

From the same category
  • Office workers of the world unite: it’s time to revive the three-martini lunch | Andrea Javor | The Guardian
  • Trump’s war accomplished nothing – the Iran deal is proof | Kenneth Roth | The Guardian
  • Americans are spending $800 just to cool their homes. We are at a breaking point | Mark Wolfe | The Guardian
  • I once protested against the G7. I feel no need now, because it’s collapsing all by itself | Zoe Williams | The Guardian
  • As haters and critics circle, will anyone speak up for the BBC? Yes, a huge, loyal army of ordinary Britons | Lindsay Mackie | The Guardian
From the same tags
  • Achraf Hakimi to stand trial in rape case, French court confirms
  • The education of USMNT goalkeeper (and Harvard grad) Matt Freese
  • What if Reyna’s World Cup wondergoal is only the beginning for the USMNT?
  • The Minions and their ‘big boss’ Chris Meledandri keep a blockbuster machine humming
  • Aguirre relishes Azteca knockout matches after Mexico win Group A
Më të lexuarat — 48h
  1. 01
    Football David hat trick sees Canada rout Qatar for 1st ever World Cup win 4 lexime · 11 hours ago
  2. 02
    Opinion I once protested against the G7. I feel no need now, because it’s collapsing all by itself | Zoe Williams | The Guardian 4 lexime · 2 days ago
  3. 03
    Lifestyle Springsteen, Bono and Stevie Wonder will help the Obamas open their presidential museum 4 lexime · 21 hours ago
  4. 04
    Football Premier League fixtures schedule 2026-27 in full 4 lexime · 2 hours ago
  5. 05
    Football Mom of Cape Verde’s Vozinha gets visa to attend next World Cup match 4 lexime · 2 days ago
  6. 06
    Opinion Is it bad that Elon Musk has a trillion dollars? Yes, and here’s why | Ingrid Robeyns | The Guardian 3 lexime · 2 days ago
  7. 07
    Football Why Onuoha believes Bellingham, Rogers need to start for England vs. Croatia – ESPN Video 3 lexime · 2 days ago
Similar articles
Opinion

Office workers of the world unite: it’s time to revive the three-martini lunch | Andrea Javor | The Guardian

As a 46-year-old executive who now has both people and AI agents reporting to me on the org…

Viral Alert News • 23 hours ago • 6 min read
Opinion

Trump’s war accomplished nothing – the Iran deal is proof | Kenneth Roth | The Guardian

No one gets a Nobel peace prize for ending a war he started, let alone for a pointless…

Viral Alert News • 23 hours ago • 5 min read
Opinion

Americans are spending $800 just to cool their homes. We are at a breaking point | Mark Wolfe | The Guardian

Since 2020, the stock market has more than doubled. Americans who own substantial financial assets are reveling in…

Viral Alert News • 23 hours ago • 4 min read
VA-NEWS VA-NEWS

Modern portal of reliable, independent and multilingual news. Accurate information, every day.

  • Health
  • Lifestyle
  • News
    • World
  • Opinion
  • Sport
    • Football
  • uncategorized
  • © 2026 VA News. Made with ♥ in Albania
    ⌂ Home ◷ Latest

    Powered by
    ►
    Necessary cookies enable essential site features like secure log-ins and consent preference adjustments. They do not store personal data.
    None
    ►
    Functional cookies support features like content sharing on social media, collecting feedback, and enabling third-party tools.
    None
    ►
    Analytical cookies track visitor interactions, providing insights on metrics like visitor count, bounce rate, and traffic sources.
    None
    ►
    Advertisement cookies deliver personalized ads based on your previous visits and analyze the effectiveness of ad campaigns.
    None
    ►
    Unclassified cookies are cookies that we are in the process of classifying, together with the providers of individual cookies.
    None
    Powered by