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Letters archive

Join the conversation in New Scientist's Letters section, where readers can share their thoughts and opinions on articles and see responses from experts and enthusiasts across a range of science topics. To submit a letter, please see our terms and email letters@newscientist.com


14 June 2023

Maybe we should view AIs as potential descendants (1)

From Len Mann, Gerrards Cross, Buckinghamshire, UK

Should we fear AI? All species on Earth eventually go extinct, and we will be no exception. We are the most intelligent species here, yet we aren't clever enough to save ourselves. Our demise will mean the loss of everything we treasure: music, culture and our life stories ( Letters, 3 June ). In the …

14 June 2023

Maybe we should view AIs as potential descendants (2)

From Alec Cawley, Penwood, Hampshire, UK

I am afraid Barry Cash is being overly optimistic in expecting AI to have cold, Spock-like logic. The large language models currently making waves as chatbots are trained on a vast amount of human writing. All they add is a perfect memory. Otherwise, what they present is an average of our thoughts and prejudices. And, …

14 June 2023

Fixing cybersecurity will be a long-term task

From Daniel Dresner, professor of cybersecurity, University of Manchester, UK

You report a call for everyone to "think like a hacker" to improve online security ( 20 May, p 43 ). Leaving the muddied epithet of who is a hacker aside, cybersecurity is now, more than ever, a complex activity that involves people ranging from the developers of hardware and software through to the day-to-day …

14 June 2023

Higher-income countries have also abused nature

From Simon Goodman, Pemberton, British Columbia, Canada

Simon Ings's stance in his review of the documentary A Crack in the Mountain appears laudable at first. The film relates the beauty and tragedy of Hang Son Doong cave in Vietnam. The local government could ruin this part of a UNESCO World Heritage Site by installing a cable car to carry 1000 tourists an …

14 June 2023

Horses are born to run... to get away from predators

From Merlin Reader, London, UK

There is a big difference between racing herbivores and carnivores. Herbivores usually run fast to flee predators. So horses may be stressed when racing. Dogs enjoy running: when they catch prey, they are often excited. Ultimately, racing and hunting (and pedigree) animals are inbred to varying degrees. Unless they are used as breeding stock, they …

14 June 2023

Machines coming for our jobs could yet turn out well

From Andy Green,Epsom, Surrey, UK

Paul Massie worries what will be left of society if people can't work as AIs take jobs. This could yet be a utopian dream not a dystopian one – a life of leisure beckons ( Letters, 20 May ).

14 June 2023

For the record

Hotspots for ultra-high-energy cosmic rays seem to centre on galaxies Centaurus A and M82 ( 3 June, p 46 ).

21 June 2023

We can talk to the animals, so chat with ET is possible (2)

From Daniel Magasanik, Melbourne, Australia

Impey doesn't mention another reason for caution in contacting aliens, even if they are assumed to be benevolent. They might freely make technologies available to us that are far more advanced than our own, thinking that they could only help us. They may assume that we don't suffer from the dysfunction and conflicts that plague …

21 June 2023

We can talk to the animals, so chat with ET is possible (3)

From David Myers, Commugny, Switzerland

The reason we can't communicate with chimps is because they aren't sufficiently intelligent, but this has no bearing whatsoever on whether we could communicate with an alien species clever enough to detect our messages.

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