There from tel aviv. The paper also looks at the growing pressure theresa may is facing to strike a deal over brexit. Brexit is also on the front page of the i which takes a look at the ins and outs of the talks, from Philip Hammond and the divorce bill, to david davis and his lack of impact assessments. The telegraph says Jean Claude Juncker fears the uk government might collapse next week, if a breakthrough in the brexit talks isnt found. The metro leads with the story of a man arrested after a brawl in a westminster bar on the parliamentary estate. The mirror leads with reports of a plot against prince george, with a story about a man whos appeared in court accused of allegedly urging jihadis to attack the young prince at school. The Financial Times top story is about plans by a uk Shopping Centre owner to combat a high street slowdown, as retail sales shift online. The times has the story of a shortage of medicines which is forcing some Cancer Patients and those with Severe Mental
Im stephen sackur. For now, the bbc employs human beings like me to question the way our world works. But, for how much longer . As research and Development Effort into Artificial Intelligence intensifies, is there any sphere of human activity that wont be revolutionised by ai and robotics . My guest today, is alan winfield. A world renowned professor of robot ethics. From driving, to education, to work and warfare, are we unleashing machines which could turn the dark visions of Science Fiction into science fact . Alan winfield, welcome to hardtalk. High, delighted to be here, stephen. Hi. You do have a fascinating title, professor of robot ethics. Im tempted to ask you first, whats most important to you, the engineering, the robotics, or the ethics, being an ethicist . Well, both are equally important. I am fundamentally an engineer, so i bring and engineering perspective to robot ethics. But i would say more than half of my work now is actually thinking about. And, you know, im kind
Im stephen sackur. For now, the bbc employs human beings like me to question the way our world works. But, for how much longer . As research and Development Effort into Artificial Intelligence intensifies, is there any sphere of human activity that wont be revolutionised by aland robotics . My guest today is alan winfield. A world renowned professor of robot ethics. From driving, to education, to work and warfare, are we unleashing machines which could turn the dark visions of Science Fiction into science fact . Alan winfield, welcome to hardtalk. High, delighted to be here, stephen. You do have a fascinating title, professor of robot ethics, im tempted to ask you first, whats most important to you, the engineering, the robotics or the ethics, being an ethicist . Well, both are equally important. I am fundamentally an engineer, so i bring and engineering perspective to robot ethics and engineering. But, i would say, that more than half of my work now is actually thinking about. And, yo
Like me to question the way our world works, but for how much longer . As research into Artificial Intelligence intensifies, is there any sphere of human activity that wont be revolutionised by ai and robotics . My guest today is alun wyn jones, a world renowned professor of robot ethics, are we unleashing machines which could turn the dark visions of Science Fiction into science fact . Alan winfield, will welcome to heart talk. You have a fantastic title, director of robot ethics, im tempted to ask you, whats more important to you, robotics or being an ethicist . Both are important, im an engineer so i bring a engineering perspective to robotics but more than half of my work now is thinking about and. Im kind of a professional warrior now. Would you say science has shifted over the course of your career . You started out very much in computers and engineering but increasingly as you have dug deeply into the subject, in a sense the more philosophical side of it has been written large f
Of George Papadopoulos and Paul Manafort on its front page. Its the top story in the guardian too, summed up in its headline trump under new pressure after ex aide admits perjury. Its a different lead in the metro. Its splash is the government promising a crackdown against Sexual Harassment at westminster. Its the same lead for the Daily Telegraph the paper says the story could turn out to be more embarrassing for mps than the expenses scandal. The times is one of several papers to feature a picture of kevin spacey who today apologised for inappropriate advances a young actor claims he made when he was only fourteen. And the express focuses on a health story the paper says a dose of aspirin a day can halve the risk of developing some cancers. Now its time for hardtalk. Welcome to hardtalk with me, stephen sackur. For now, the abc employs human beings like me to question the way the world works. For how much longer . The bbc employs human beings. As research into Artificial Intelligence