Well, not really - these are the ambitions of a robot. Khaleej Times interviewed Sophia, the popular humanoid, at the second day of the Knowledge Summit. The robot, who recently received a Saudi ...
This AI robot once said it wanted to destroy humans. Senior correspondent Steve Kovach interviews Sophia, the world's first robot citizen. While the robot can respond to many questions ...
The Wall Street Journal’s Geoffrey Fowler and Joanna Stern interview Sophia, Hanson Robotics’s latest creation, and the chief scientist, Dr. Ben Goertzel, at the Converge tech conference in ...
She's the first robot ... Sophia has some impressive capabilities, she doesn't yet have consciousness, but David Hanson have said they expect that could happen within a few years. During an ...
Saudi Arabia granted Sophia the humanoid robot with robot citizenship ahead of the Future Investment Initiative conference. Following is a transcript of the video. This robot just became a citizen.
The WSJ quizzed Hanson Robotics’s lifelike creation Sophia on topics from U.S. presidential candidates to a robot's place in the bedroom. Photo/Video: Menglin Huang/The Wall Street Journal ...
Sophia the robot is a celebrity in its own right ... The mouth smiles, the eyes blink, it turns to look to the side. For my interview, Sophia's head - which is really the extent of the robotics ...
"Why?" I asked. "I am not sure I understand why yet." Not an altogether terrible answer from Sophia, an AI robot, in an interview with Business Insider last week at Web Summit in Lisbon.
The keynote speaker this year, though, isn’t human. Sophia the robot and her creators at Hanson Robotics, a Chinese robotics company, say she’s the world’s first robot citizen. Sophia is ...
Sophia the robot might not have a heart or brain, but it does have Saudi Arabian citizenship. As of October 25, Sophia is the first robot in history to be a full citizen of a country. Sophia was ...