Trancendental
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[quote name='mykevermin']Well, let me set you up, then. Tell us: what will "arms" be in the year 2240? (and, more importantly, will we finally have space cars that fold up into briefcases that can be carried into our office at Spaceley Sprockets?)[/quote]
http://www.abcnews.go.com/Technology/Story?id=4354764&page=1
Oh yeah, this seems like a really good time to give up the people's right to bear arms.
Governments around the world are rushing to develop military robots capable of killing autonomously without considering the legal and moral implications, warns a leading roboticist. But another robotics expert argues that robotic soldiers could perhaps be made more ethical than human ones.
Noel Sharkey of Sheffield University, UK, says he became "really scared" after researching plans outlined by the US and other nations to roboticise their military forces. He will outline his concerns to at a one day conference held in London, UK, on Wednesday.
Over 4000 semi-autonomous robots are already deployed by the US in Iraq, says Sharkey, and other countries – including several European nations, Canada, South Korea, South Africa, Singapore and Israel – are developing similar technologies.
...
Sharkey is most concerned about the prospect of having robots decide for themselves when to "pull the trigger". Currently, a human is always involved in decisions of this nature. But the Pentagon is nearly 2 years into a research programme aimed at having robots identify potential threats without human help.
"The main problem is that these systems do not have the discriminative power to do that," he says, "and I don't know if they ever will."
...
"One of the fundamental abilities I want to give [these systems] is to refuse an order and explain why."
Yet Arkin does not think battlefield robots can be made a smart as human soldiers. "We cannot make them that generally intelligent, they will be more like dogs, used for specialised situations," he says
But he is so far concentrating his research scenarios involving armies. "For those situations we have very clear cut guidance from the Geneva Convention, the Hague and elsewhere about what is ethical," he explains.
http://www.abcnews.go.com/Technology/Story?id=4354764&page=1
Oh yeah, this seems like a really good time to give up the people's right to bear arms.
