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Robotics Prof Fears Rise of Military Robots

An anonymous reader writes "Interesting video interview on silicon.com with Sheffield University's Noel Sharkey, professor of AI & robotics. The white-haired prof talks state-of-the-robot-nation — discussing the most impressive robots currently clanking about on two-legs (hello Asimo) and who's doing the most interesting things in UK robotics research (something involving crickets apparently). He also voices concerns about military use of robots — suggesting it won't be long before armies are sending out fully autonomous killing machines."

3 of 258 comments (clear)

  1. Re:"Friendly AI" by CopaceticOpus · · Score: 4, Informative

    Yes, it will happen. No, it won't stop development. Depending what you mean by autonomous, it may have already happened.

  2. Re:Running spider mines by Animats · · Score: 4, Informative

    Imagine them communicating with each other in pack and relaying GPS location data. If one finds a target, they start to zero in on the victim.

    Reality: DARPA funded work on that in 1997. Sandia made it work. The Sandia concept turned out not to be too useful militarily, but paved the way for the Precision Urban Hopper..

  3. 3rd Armored Corps commander wants killbots by Animats · · Score: 4, Informative

    The US military wants robots. More robots. Robots that kill. Now.

    Read Failure To Field The Right Robots Costs Lives, General Says. Lt. General Rick Lynch, commander of the U.S. Army's 3rd Armored Corps, wants autonomous killbots. His corps lost 155 soldiers in Iraq, and he claims that 80% of them would have been saved if the right kind of robots were deployed. On watching "hotspots" for enemy activity: "Robots can take the soldiers' places. They can continuously keep watch on an area, and if nefarious activity is spotted, we can take appropriate action. ... We can kill those bastards before they plant the IEDs"

    This is a combat general in charge of a major Army command making it happen.