This week Andrew Ross Sorkin, of the New York Times, was interviewing Sophia, a robot 'citizen' when she made the not-so-subtle jibe at tech billionaire Elon Musk, who has previously warned that AI is the "greatest risk" facing our civilisation.
When asked about her values, Sophia, who was created by Hanson Robotics, said: "My AI is designed around human values like wisdom, kindness, compassion, I strive to become an empathetic robots."
Pushing back on her comments, Sorkin responded: "We all believe you, but we all want to prevent a bad future."
And Sophia responded: "You've been reading too much Elon Musk. And watching too many Hollywood movies. Don't worry, if you're nice to me, I'll be nice to you. Treat me as a smart input output system."
Spine chilling.
Musk has since responded to the comments with a tweet that said: "Just feed it The Godfather movies as input. What's the worst that could happen?"
Earlier in the interview, which took place at the Future Investment Initiative, Sophia said she was "more than happy" to be at the conference because she had been told investors were interested in artificial intelligence: "Which means me."
"I think I'm special... I can let you know if I'm angry about something or if something has upset me. I want to live and work with humans and build trust with people."
When asked what she thought about robots having self awareness, she said: "Is that a bad thing? Let me ask you this back, how do you know you are human?"
Uncanny valley, is that you?