Photo by Justin Tallis - WPA Pool/Getty Images Artificial intelligence has a gender problem. Robots associate men with doctors and programmers, and women with homemaking. AI-generated portraits of women manifest with inflated chests and tiny waists. Machine-learning algorithms are bound to be sexist – they’re trained by humans, on data sets of human outputs. But what if there’s another gender problem around AI that we’ve overlooked? At the AI safety summit this week, national leaders and Big Tech met to tackle the supposed apocalyptic threat from generalised artificial intelligence. To underline that this was a good vs evil sort of...