RT.com
06 Oct 2025, 21:32 GMT+10
Technology must be an extension of a persons will, never a replacement, the president of the Chilean Robotics Association has told RT
The future of technology depends not on the field itself but on the intentions of those planning to use it, Rodrigo Andres Quevedo Silva, the head of the Chilean Robotics Association, has said.
The specialist in artificial intelligence, bioengineering, and cybersecurity arrived in Russia ahead of the Second International Symposium 'Inventing the Future' that is scheduled to be held in Moscow on October 7 and 8.
"For me, it's very simple: technology must be an extension of a person's will, never a replacement," the inventor and co-inventor of 14 technological solutions, including an automatic translator for deaf-blind people called Oki Doky, told RT.
Technological sovereignty is the ability of nations to build their own future with all means available, without the need to ask any outside power "for permission," according to Quevedo Silva.
The issue is gaining traction in Latin America, said the inventor, who is expected to speak at the symposium. "That's what we work on every day."
According to Quevedo Silva, the path towards achieving technological sovereignty is clear: it lies in supporting startups and local laboratories. "We are the engine. We are the ones out on the streets, seeing problems up close," he said.
Governments should aid tech startups and "make the path easier for them" rather than create state-owned AI companies, the entrepreneur believes. "Obtaining an electronic component should not be a bureaucratic nightmare. There should be funding for research aimed at solving specific problems, not just for publishing papers," he said, adding that "investing in people," i.e. in training and education, is equally important.
The entrepreneur called distrust between nations and companies one of the major obstacles on the path towards global cooperation. Both governments and enterprises "prefer to compete rather than collaborate," he said, pointing to the "lack of a common language - not only technical, but also ethical."
According to Quevedo Silva, the promotion of "collective advancement with friendly countries" is needed so that everyone can "achieve collective learning." The world needs to see projects that demonstrate that collaboration works, he stated, adding that such projects should "benefit all of humanity, without bias."
"We must start building those bridges, even if small, to generate trust and show that by sharing basic knowledge, we all go further and faster," he said.
"We haven't agreed on what the basic rules are for working with something as intimate as the human mind. In Chile, the use of brain-computer interfaces and neuro-rights has been regulated to the point of being included in the constitution. It has been a pioneer in that area," the entrepreneur added.
This year, the 'Inventing the Future' symposium will feature more than 200 speakers, including scientists, architects, designers, writers, diplomats, and representatives of the creative industries from Russia, China, the US, Italy, as well as from Africa, Latin America, the Middle East, and Southeast Asia.
The program includes around 50 events divided into three thematic blocks: society, technology, and global cooperation.
Within the framework of multiple multidisciplinary conferences, debates, master classes, and project laboratories, participants will discuss demographic challenges, urbanization, biotechnologies, artificial intelligence, space technologies, and Russia's humanitarian cooperation with Africa and the countries of the Global South.
(RT.com)
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