KEY POINTS
  • Slaughterbots are weapons that select and apply force to targets without human intervention. Instead, they make their decisions with artificial intelligence software, which is essentially a series of algorithms.
  • For the first time ever this year, the bulk of the 125 nations that belong to the United Nations' Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons said they wanted new laws to be introduced on killer robots.
  • However, some countries that are developing these weapons, including the U.S. and Russia, were in opposition, making a unilateral agreement impossible.
Delegates are seen during a meeting of the review conference of the Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons, (CCW) focussing on lethal autonomous weapons systems (killer robots) at the United Nations in Geneva on December 17, 2021.

A UN conference failed to agree on banning the use and development of so-called "slaughterbots" at a meeting in Geneva last week, raising alarm bells among experts in artificial intelligence, military strategy, disarmament and humanitarian law.

Slaughterbots are weapons that select and apply force to targets without human intervention. Instead, they make their decisions with artificial intelligence software, which is essentially a series of algorithms.