The UAE’s AI minister wants ‘murder’ in the metaverse to be a real crime – The Next Web

Posted: May 27, 2022 at 2:07 am

Omar Sultan Al Olama, the United Arab Emirates minister of artificial intelligence, yesterday told an audience at the World Economic forum in Davos that its his belief that people who commit serious crimes in the metaverse should be punished with real-world criminal consequences.

Per an article by CNBCs Sam Shead, the minister views this as a necessary measure to protect peoples mental health:

If I send you a text on WhatsApp, its text right? It might terrorize you but to a certain degree it will not create the memories that you will have PTSD (post-traumatic stress disorder) from it.

But if I come into the metaverse and its a realistic world that were talking about in the future and I actually murder you, and you see it it actually takes you to a certain extreme where you need to enforce aggressively across the world because everyone agrees that certain things are unacceptable.

Tell me you dont understand how post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) works without telling me you dont understand how PTSD works.

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Upfront: There is no medical threshold by which PTSD occurs. Clinical diagnosis involves observation and interviews with a medical professional.

Anecdotally speaking, PTSD isnt necessarily triggered in the manner which Al Olama indicated. I was diagnosed with PTSD while on active duty military service after learning about the death of someone Id mentored. Other peoples diagnosis have come after entirely different experiences.

Jennifer Kobelt, a survivor of the NXIVM cult, told investigators and documentarians that her PTSD was triggered after being subjected to a horrific experiment in which she was exposed to graphic violence from Hollywood cinema and a real-world snuff film.

Deeper: You cant murder an avatar. At least not in the legitimate legal sense. Its a stupid idea that doesnt deserve much attention, but lets just lay it bare real quick so we can move.

Lets say, 10 years from now, youre wandering around in Metas version of the metaverse. Youre probably wearing a VR headset, and maybe the techs advanced to the point where the visual and audio fidelity are nearly indistinguishable from reality.

All of the sudden, someone pushes the buttons on their control pad to cause their avatar to leap out of a digital bush and then they push the buttons on their control pad that cause them to stab your avatar.

Your avatar bleeds out and dies. You have to witness the knife going in! Oh! The horror!

But wait, lets rewind for a second. How did the knife get there? Who programmed the leaping out of the bush animation? Are there more kill moves? Whats the combo for a silent takedown?

Whoops. Im getting ahead of myself. I forgot, were not talking about a video game. Were talking about murder most foul, in the metaverse.

Im not sure what the UAEs minister of AI knows about the field that the rest of us dont, but in this particular version of reality, theres no basis for this fantasy.

Rock bottom: You may as well pass a law against murdering people in video games. And that means all of you people who play Call of Duty are screwed some of you have more kills than old age.

The point is that, no matter how traumatizing it might be to see yourself murdered in first person, its not like Zuckerbergs planning on making that a feature.

Maybe Al Olamas thinking the metaverse is going to be a splintered internet experience like web, where dark corners of the platform could be host to anything.

But, at least for now, the companies such as Meta, Nvidia, Microsoft, Google, and Epic that are investing billions of dollars into creating bespoke experiences probably arent going to put together a team of designers focused on adding PTSD-inducing gore to their production models.

Sure, a hacker could hack some violence onto a server or find an exploit that shows violence. And its possible some sort of underground mod scene could develop over time.

But seriously. The idea that somehow, youll be casually shopping in the Nike section of Metas billions-of-dollars and counting metaverse and suddenly a digital Jack the Ripper is going to appear in front of you in a rabid frenzy is just plain silly.

If you can murder people in the metaverse, itll be a feature that people log in specifically to experience. For the same reason so many of us play Dead By Daylight, Resident Evil, and Call of Duty, or watch R-rated horror movies, theres plenty of people whod enjoy a good old-fashioned fake-murdering in a VR world.

Quick take: Everything about the idea of criminalizing digitized violence in virtual reality is dumb. This kind of blathering rhetoric just demonstrates how far detached from reality some technologists can be. Nobodys worried about logging onto a VR version of Facebook and being murdered in their headset.

There are plenty of real ethical concerns that the minister of AI for the sixth richest country in the world could spend their time on.

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The UAE's AI minister wants 'murder' in the metaverse to be a real crime - The Next Web

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