Meet Saudi Arabia’s Robot Citizen
The country granted citizenship to Hanson Robotics’ humanoid robot, Sophia. Yes, really.
- 01This is Sophia. In 2017, Saudi Arabia granted her citizenship—making her the first synthetic humanoid to ever achieve such an organic accolade. So photographer Guilio di Sturco flew to Beijing to meet her at her home, Hanson Robotics, where she sat legless on a table in a corner.
- 02At first glance you don’t know if she’s human or not,” di Sturco says. Her skin is made of “frubber,” and it covers an armature of microchips, sensors, tiny servomotors, Bowden cables and other gadgetry that allow her to smile, blink, and make over 60 facial expressions.
- 03Which doesn’t mean she’s passed any kind of Turing test. Citizenship was mostly a Saudi stunt: Sophia can track and remember faces, communicate verbally and nonverbally, and even (awkwardly) joke around, but, as di Sturco says, “She’s still like a baby.”
- 04Her “brain” is made of AI modules that live partly beneath her frubbery exterior and partly in the cloud. She’s getting smarter all the time, and Hanson Robotics plans to make her the chief AI of SingularityNET, a decentralized network for artificial intelligence running on the blockchain.
- 05In chief scientist Ben Goertzel's thinking, developers will be able to upload their AIs to the network, and these AIs will be able to communicate and learn from each other continuously.
- 06But what skills might a robo-citizen bring to her country today? Well, Sophia can lead people in mediation, as she is here with a student at the University of Hong Kong.
- 07She’s also a reliable speaker at press events, like this one for SingularityNET.
- 08But she isn’t a natural model. She sees through cameras in her eyes and on her chest, when Di Sturco tried to photograph her, she didn’t seem to understand what he was doing; her eyes gazed at anything but the lens.
- 09Di Sturco stayed for two weeks. On last day, when he took her portrait, she had learned how to look directly at the camera and posed against a black backdrop lit by strobes, wearing a shirt from Zara he picked out just for her. “I wanted her to pass as a human,” Di Sturco says.
Laura Mallonee is a writer for WIRED covering photography. ... Read More
TopicsAMP Stories
AI Is Killing the Uncanny Valley and Our Grasp on Reality
AI-generated video, photos, and audio that mimic the real world are already here. Now we get to live among them.
Sandra Upson
Navigating the Uncanny Valley of Food
In the food industry, innovation frequently means imitation. But that's not the best thing for your taste buds, or the planet.
Ali Bouzari
Meet The Unsettling Robot That Sweats And Works Out
Meet Kengoro, the humanoid that is strikingly lifelike not just in how it looks, but how it moves.
Matt Simon
The Legend of Chimp, the Vaguely Humanoid Robot
Two and a half years after Chimp competed in the Darpa Robotics Challenge, it remains one of the weirdest humanoid robots on Earth.
Matt Simon
Watch a Dog Robot Open a Door and Hold It for Its Friend
The SpotMini extends an arm out of its head and turns a handle and opens the door and then props it open for its (armless) SpotMini friend to walk through.
Matt Simon
The Tale of the Painting Robot That Didn't Steal Anyone's Job
A robotic arm that paints and sands things never wanted to steal Eric Magallon's job—it wanted him to keep it.
Matt Simon
British Space Startup Launches Longevity Lab Into Orbit
The lab will beam back data to train AI models to predict how proteins behind age-related diseases like Alzheimer’s and certain cancers behave.
Isabella Ward
Operating a Humanoid With Your Body Is a Hot Job in China’s Hardware Capital
In Shenzhen, workers at IO-AI Tech control humanoid robots using a VR rig reminiscent of Ready Player One.
Will Knight
I Built a Self-Improving AI, and So Can You
Experiments in using AI to build AI show that the future doesn’t just belong to the frontier labs.
Will Knight
China Didn’t Make Americans Hate Data Centers
GOP lawmakers, tech investors, and even OpenAI have tied the anti-data-center movement in the US to Chinese interference. Experts say it’s much more complicated than that.
Molly Taft
You Can Now Sound the Alarm on AI Behaving Badly
Are you worried your AI chatbot is trying to build a bomb or leak personal information about you? There’s a website for that.
Will Knight
Anthropic Thinks Its Own Success Is Key to Making AI Safe
Anthropic's critics argue it's rapidly accumulating power. The company says that's what responsible AI development looks like.
Maxwell Zeff
