What Cyberdyne Systems forgot. . .

Professional Engineer & PE Exam Forum

Help Support Professional Engineer & PE Exam Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

EM_PS

shining like a lighter...
Joined
Jan 3, 2007
Messages
2,012
Reaction score
46
Location
Michigan
Plan to Teach Military Robots the Rules of War New Scientist (06/18/09) ; Simonite, Tom

Georgia Institute of Technology robotics engineer Ron Arkin is researching how military robots could be programmed to act ethically and obey the rules of engagement and has developed an "ethical governor" intended to guarantee that robotic aircraft follow a set of ethical guidelines in combat. He is demonstrating the system in simulations based on recent campaigns by U.S. troops in the Middle East. The simulations show that the system is able to identify a group of enemy soldiers but does not fire because they are inside a cemetery, and thus firing would violate international law, and that the system can limit a robot's fire to weapons that would only damage an enemy vehicle but not any surrounding vehicles or buildings. To develop the software, Arkin used studies of military ethics and conversations with military personnel, with the objective of reducing non-combatant casualties. Arkin emphasizes that his research, which is funded by the U.S. Army, is not intended to develop prototype battle robots. "The most important outcome of my research is not the architecture, but the discussion that it stimulates," Arkin says. He believes that the development of machines capable of determining when to use lethal force is inevitable, which means it is critical that when such robots are developed that they are capable of being trusted.

(http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn17332-plan-to-teach-military-r...)
 
So this "skynet" that they are building, when does it come online?

And "military" robots - does that not already eliminate rule 1 of the 3 rules?

US robotics

 
Oh boy. . .

New 'Emotional' Robot Unveiled in Japan CBS13.com (06/23/09)

Scientists at Tokyo's Waseda University recently demonstrated KOBIAN, a robot that is able to express emotion with its entire face and body. KOBIAN can use its arms and legs, open and close its eyes, and move its lips and eyebrows as it expresses emotions ranging from happiness, fear and surprise to sadness, anger and disgust. For example, the robot opens its eyes and mouth wide and raises its arms to show happiness and droops its head and covers its eyes to show sorrow. Waseda professor Atsuo Takanishi led a research team that spent two and a half years creating KOBIAN. The researchers used 48 actuators to give the robot its range of facial and bodily movements and covered its hands with a soft material to give it the feeling of human hands. Takanishi says expressing feeling is an "important factor" in achieving "natural communication" between robots and humans. KOBIAN is still in the prototype stage, and Takanishi says it will likely be several decades before robots are helping people in their homes.(http://cbs13.com/watercooler/humanoid.robot.emotions.2.1056050.html)
and just what we need, clingy, moody, emo robots! Even Data found out he was fully 'functional' (with Yar) - no emotions needed

 
why does this remind me of the movie War Games with Matthew Broderick? Where at the end they teach the super computer that the only way to win at (thermonuclear) war is not to play at all.

 
Last edited by a moderator:
Back
Top