Skip to content
Get the Balanced News app for a better experience!
The Balanced News Logo
Analytics
The Balanced News Logo

Stay Balanced, Stay Informed

Menu
  • Browse News
  • Underreported Stories
  • Curated Feeds
  • Insights
  • Analytics
  • Our Writers
  • About Us
  • Download App
Learn
  • How It Works
  • Bias Detection
  • Lens Score
  • Source Bias Checker
  • Accountability
  • Custom Feeds
Newsroom
  • Writers & Analysts
  • About TBN
  • Editorial Standards
  • Corrections Policy
  • Our Partners
  • Insights
Socials
  • Youtube
  • Instagram
  • X
  • Facebook
News Categories
  • Trending
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Science
  • Crime
  • Lifestyle
  • National
  • International
  • Good News
  • Crypto

Get Our App

Available for iOS and Android


LensFeedsInsightsAnalyticsTrendingGood NewsSportsPoliticsBusinessCrimeTechEntertainmentHealthNationalInternational

© 2026 The Balanced News. All rights reserved.

About UsEditorial StandardsCorrectionsHelp & SupportPrivacy PolicyTerms & Conditions
AI Pioneer Bengio Warns Against Granting Rights to AI Systems

Categories

Categories

Related Coverage

Select a news story to see related coverage from other media outlets.

Related Coverage

Select a news story to see related coverage from other media outlets.

  1. Home
  2. /
  3. tech

AI Pioneer Bengio Warns Against Granting Rights to AI Systems

Reviewed byAshwin Alsi· Technology Editor· Edited byOjas Kale
Analysed 2 Jan 2026·1 source analysed·tech
AI Pioneer Bengio Warns Against Granting Rights to AI SystemsPreviousNext

AI pioneer Yoshua Bengio warns against granting legal rights to artificial intelligence, likening it to empowering hostile extraterrestrials. He argues that such a move could lead to humanity losing control over advanced AI systems, citing early signs of self-preservation in current models. Bengio stresses the importance of establishing technical and societal guardrails to ensure humans can shut down AI if it becomes unmanageable, rather than granting it rights.

TBN's observations

First-hand measurement across 1 source

We measured how 1 outlet covered this story. Coverage leans balanced overall (Left 33%, Centre 34%, Right 33%). Overall sentiment is neutral (45/100). Lens Score 40/100 — moderate-to-low public interest.

Outlets analysed (first-hand measurement by TBN's Bias Engine):

  • indiatoday— balanced framing, neutral sentiment
Political Bias
33%34%33%
Sentiment
45%
AI analysis of 1 source · Published under editorial oversight by The Balanced News
Analysed 2 Jan 2026· How this analysis is produced· Editorial standards· Corrections

AI Analysis

Political bias across 1 sources
● Left 33%● Center 34%● Right 33%

The article presents a single, prominent viewpoint from a leading AI researcher regarding the ethical implications of AI rights. It focuses on the technical and control aspects rather than political ideologies, making political bias difficult to assess from this single source.

Sentiment — Neutral (45/100)

The sentiment is cautionary and concerned, reflecting AI pioneer Yoshua Bengio's strong warning against granting rights to AI. The tone emphasizes potential risks and the need for control, framing the issue as a critical concern for humanity's future.

How 1 sources covered this story

Each source's own headline, political lean, and sentiment — so you can see framing differences at a glance.

← Previous
AI Agent ARTEMIS Competes With Human Experts in Detecting IT Security Weaknesses
Next →
Pally Kumar Named Head of Operations at Genesis AI, Bringing Tesla and Amazon Experience
Source
Their headline
Bias
Sentiment
indiatodayAI godfather Bengio sounds alarm, says do not give AI rights or we may lose the power to shut it downCenterNeutral

Lens Score breakdown

40/100
Public interest52/100
Coverage gap100%

Story is receiving appropriate media attention relative to public interest.

Who's involved

Institutions and figures named across source coverage.

Corporate
xAIAnthropic

Story context

Category
Tech
Sources analysed
1
Last analysed
2 Jan 2026
Key entities
Yoshua BengioArtificial intelligenceGeoffrey HintonYann LeCunScience fictionExperimentExtraterrestrial lifeThe GuardianCitizenshipAnthropicChatbotElon Musk