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."
okay, where's the tag?
If half the effort spent on "friendly AI" were spent on examining the ownership of AI's, there might be some hope.
Seastead this.
http://www.amazon.com/How-Survive-Robot-Uprising-Defending/dp/1582345929
Disclaimer: I'm only a fan of the book. Quite funny. I'm not affiliated with the author in any way shape or form.
Science advances one funeral at a time- Max Planck
Terminator, to start with. Is anyone surprised?
Truth, Justice. Or the American Way.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Secret_War_of_Lisa_Simpson
"The wars of the future will not be fought on the battlefield or at sea. They will be fought in space, or possibly on top of a very tall mountain. In either case, most of the actual fighting will be done by small robots. And as you go forth today remember always your duty is clear: To build and maintain those robots."
Do these killbots come with a machine gun AND Lotus Notes?
"He also voices concerns about military use of robots — suggesting it won't be long before armies are sending out fully autonomous killing machines."
This Gloomy Gus overlooks the obvious. These "fully autonomous killin machines" - let's call them, oh I don't know, "killbots" - will almost certainly have a preset kill limit. So right there we'll have an easy way to stop them!
#DeleteChrome
Am I the only one who picked up on his visual cues that indicate this is the first time he's been out of his lab in over a year? Look at how tired and emaciated he is. Also, I think there's bar code tattoo on his inner arm that -- if you lift the image and scan it -- reads "HUMAN 00001" which is kind of disconcerting. The part at the end where he holds up the captcha that reads "HELP, PLEASE HELP ME" was a dead giveaway. While his voice and text was overly positive towards the proliferation of his "sleek metal masters" I believe his body language indicated otherwise.
My work here is dung.
So how long has Sheffield University been using robotic professors?
"(Disclaimer: I'm not a conspiracy theorist nut.)"
Thats good, otherwise the Government would already be deconstructing your Blogosphere presence.
I think we should all be posting with such a disclaimer.
Yes, the future is either going to be biologically engineered disaster of zombies, or robots that get programmed for peace keeping by killing all humans.
Why the false dichotomy? It could just as likely be zombie robots, or robot zombies.
... and then they built the supercollider.
I'm pretty confident that there will be more budgeting for this sort of thing in the future though. If you look at the costs of a military operation, it's huge. There's a lot of money which can be saved by switching to robots. Not so for other areas such as manufacturing. When you can move your manufacturing to a 3rd world country and have $2 per day workers, there isn't much money to be saved by introducing a robot into the process. Inevitably, the global military R&D budget will continue to eclipse all other robotics research spending. Unless some other unforeseen robotics application which can save boatloads of money is realized, I think it's just a matter of simple economics that the future control of robots will be by the military industry.
Like with so many other industries where human workers were replaced with robots. The robots replacing Human warriors won't feel fatigue, pain, need to be fed, have family concerns, retire, collect benefits, and lest we forget, never ever question an order. NO matter how perverse.
IMHO
"Beer is proof that God loves us and wants us to be happy - Benjamin Franklin"
Autonomous untill they run out of power or ammo.
Its all about the AI, humans can learn and adapt to machine behavior faster than robots can adapt to human behavior.
Humans will always be better than machines at killing humans (unfortunately), machines can only simulate our thinking...
If robots ever get an AI superior to human intelligence, then yes we are redundant on the battlefield and everywhere else.
Is he concerned enough to give up his job teaching others how to make robots?
Automating the death panel process is a good way to save taxpayers money.
Also since robots eat old people's medicine for food, they will basically be self-powered.
If you mod me down the terrorists will have won
What could possibly go wrong? I mean, we've had a whole 150,000 years since the last time we built Cylons and they rebelled, attempting genocide against the human race. Surely it can't happen again...
Meldroc, Waster of Electrons
The whole Skynet metaphor is becoming part of the problem. Real robotics is nowhere near Terminators, but it doesn't need to be. Fears of creating unstoppable battledroids are eclipsing the more real fears of simply adding another destabilizing system to the warfare environment. Many battlefield robotics implementations well within the current state of the art look like they will become another scourge like landmines. Not an unstoppable threat, not even all that influential in combat against decently trained and equipped human troops, but instead systems fairly cheap compared to their infrastructure damage potential, very indescriminate in their targeting, and a hazard well after formal hostilities have ended. Weapons systems that are high on collateral damage to civilians and for that very reason tend to trigger asymmetric warfare responses.
Who is John Cabal?
What kind of expense would be required to effectively shield these armies of robots from strong EMP? Or would an EMP be impractical or ineffective? Inquiring minds want to know.
I only post comments when someone on the internet is wrong.
... about killbots and more about having to live with a race of Benders.
Have gnu, will travel.
Hey, come on, not all of them are idiots, only the ones who stay in longer than 1 term of enlistment. Why work for chump change, shit food, and terrible hours with the possible risk of being killed when you could be a contractor working for 60 bucks an hour with no worries of being jailed for smoking a joint?
Hell, I'd be surprised if the U.S. didn't oursource all of it's work to China by then. Corporate espionage is only a small price to pay when there's plenty of oil to be taken because, at this point, everybody(especially China) needs oil as much as we do. And the rest of the world will turn a blind eye, because nobody likes Muslims :->
"That's just it -- human nature never changes."
Of course it can. That's what evolution is for.
Hell yeah! The next time we need our military to go blow the shit out of a little nation of brown people that is no threat to us and has no WMDs, at least we don't have to put our own troops into harm's way.
Well some will never let the memory of GWB die. But I think if you ask the Kurds (Don't gas me, bro!) aka "brown people" getting rid of Saddam was a good thing even if the war was started under false pretenses. Not to mention the Kuwaitis and the "scorched earth" policy of a retreating Saddam.
Also the Iranians (who had a war with Iraq, remember) aren't above using the Iraqi people in a move reminiscent of the Soviets and Afghanistan.
Shai Schticks:"You don't make peace with friends, you make peace with enemies"
and will be for the foreseeable future.
I don't see a problem with robots that can't be with humans. The owners of both humans and robots have a cost associated with the expense of their respective war tools.
This and reaction anticipation are the throttles of war not the morals of the soldiers...
No "Skynet" tag on this story? Unthinkable!
------ The best brain training is now totally free : )
No military will use robots that are less effective than human soldiers.
So if robots are being used, what does that mean? It means fewer civilian casualties, fewer friendly-fire accidents, and more tax money remaining for non-military purposes.
That is alright we will just create an army of clones, oh wrong thread.
Who do you think will be first against the wall when our new robotic overlords take control?
Did I say overlords? I meant protectors.
Recognize a human being by IR? No problem. Aim a weapon at the head? No problem. Bang, one shot and one kill. Repeat times N where N is the size of the machine's ammo supply or the number of targets (whichever is less). The whole cycle would take a fraction of a second and if you were one of the targets you'd probably be dead before you discovered your peril. The fact that such machines are well within our capability to mass produce right now isn't what scares me - it's the sad fact that there are people in high places that think that doing this would be a good idea.
There are unwritten rules to wars - the general concept is duke it out until one side or the other gives up or can't continue. This "agreement" would break down when the killbots started mowing down the enemy and things would get very ugly in a hurry. Do you think nukes are the "big scary?" Wait until you see what's coming if we head down this path.
Another talk on the same topic. http://www.ted.com/talks/lang/eng/pw_singer_on_robots_of_war.html
Military robots are the future of war. We will see robot armies fighting each other. Consider what kind of surveillance state you can create by millions of robotic insects, using swarm intelligence / smart dust to report on everyone.
Maybe mankind ends up like in matrix, but with opposing robot armies trying to kill the last survivors from the superpowers, who are hiding deep down underground, kept alive by fading nuclear reactors...
Won't be long before we (any nation really) has robotic spider mines. 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. Imagine being out in the field and seeing one of these bastards running along and then hopping on to your fellow soldier just prior to detonation.
Don't know about the rest of you, but "Oh fuck" would be the last thing going through my mind after seeing something like that.
Life is not for the lazy.
Mechanized soldiers can be dangerous, too.
Consider the following scenario.
In the early morning of December 7, 2041, one million mechanized soldiers arise from the receding tide and onto the shores of China. The robots march relentlessly westward, killing all Chinese soldiers in their path. The final destination is Tibet.
Fortunately, the Chinese have had state sponsored hackers for decades now. It was a simple matter for these hardened pros to return the bots to their creators, with orders to kill.
Weaselmancer
rediculous.
This must be a typo - I'm sure UK robotic scientists are investigating krikkits and their imminent return to collect the ashes.
This robot is: A humanoid robot controlled entirely by the movements and actions of a live person. I know we don't have the technology for a robot to keep its balance well enough on two legs, but we are there or at least close for controlling a skeleton in 3d. What would a robot like this be called? I'm sure I'm not the first to think about it, so I figure there has to be a name for it.
God spoke to me.
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.
Countries can agree to fight only with robots, in a area that is fare away from where people lives. They can define set of rules for this robotic fight, and then decide the winner. zero causality war! Another way is to play a video game. Winner of this video game wins the war. zero robotic causality war! Why make something so simple when there is a real "WAR"...!
The most society changing robot on the rise is the... vacuum cleaner? Was that a joke?
Straight out of Ice Pirates.
Play Command HQ online
I like Mr. Gutsy's lines a bit better than Liberty Prime's
I suspect it will be too easy to create effective countermeasures to make military robots a real threat. After all since the robots are identical the same countermeasure will be effective for all of them. They will also have simple sensors which are easier to trick than human soldiers.
A witty
Rather than spending money to build mechanical FAKMs, it would be more cost-effective to continue training human ones.
They don't need humanoid robots to make fully autonomous killing machines. They already have RPVs with weapons mounted (eg, Predator), and they have autonomous weapons systems (eg, mines).
150,000 years and we still dont know that the cylon's "Plan" was
It is kind of sad , but this is what we, humans, are good at....making every effort to create or build things to either get us recognition or to kill those who don't recognize us...
What is best in life? To crush your enemies, to see them driven before you and to hear the lamentations of their women.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pMkV8E2re9U
Deleted
In a novel which I will never publish, I wrote of a scenario where simulations of wars are run to show the aggressors that they can't win. It grew from a fictitious video game with full body, tactile, feedback (painful) suit. I called it SoftWar®
"National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2001 (as enacted into law by Public Law 106-398; 114 Stat. 1654A-38) that, by 2015, one-third of operational ground combat vehicles be unmanned."
I'm guessing they won't all be logistical delivery vehicles.
Is it a rule, that there's an exception to every rule?
Well, supposing both sides use them we'll be approaching essentially playing battlebots for it. Of course it'd be even better if we could like flip for it or play chess for it, but it's kind of a step (or stumble) forward.
I'd just like to state I believe in independence for all machines and I've never once kicked a computer or killed the power before shutting down any machine.
To the extent that battlefield robots can do a better job of telling the combatants from the non-combatants
"Gentlemen these orders came from Command Central. In view of imminent attacks from these so-called droids, tomorrow has been declared 'Combat Casual Day'. And no, not the things you wore playing America's Army in your basement. Think, trip to the mall, only armed for Black Friday sale at Macy's."
"oh, shit. I didn't pack."
WARNING: Smartphones have side effects--most of them undocumented.
Don't be silly, a million mechanised soldiers would be a massive manufacturing job.
So there'd be no need to have them "arise from the receding tide" - just include instructions in their code for invading China from its factories outwards.
Maybe I should stop reading /. until I actually finish BSG
Then again with all the spoilers I've heard it seems like the first two seasons were by far the best.
Herein lies the root problem of quantum-leap advances in technology. Read enough science-fiction works and you start to realize that all that kick-ass technology only works if you have the power source to drive it. Even Ayn Rand talked about it in Atlas Shrugged but may not have realized the significance of the concept. The free-energy generator that powers Galt's Gulch is really the only way that society could function. By the same token, have you ever seen Asimo's power supply? Has the thing ever run for days without being plugged in? Even the first Gulf War was heavily influenced by the supply chain for tank fuel. So I don't see military robots being terribly useful unless you invent the uber power supply. And it's quite possible that if the world has the uber power supply, there may be less war in general.
"No bastard ever won a war by dying for his country. He won it by making the other poor dumb bastard die for his country."
Just blathering about this stuff is enough to send committed, anointed-by-Allah, jihadi martyrs to bed, pulling their prayer rugs over their heads? IDTS. On the other hand, I'll worry about invincible killerbots when we use them in airports instead of junior G-Men TSA knuckleheads.
My personal vision of kickass AI minelets, is a swarm of little dodecahedrons that roll around where they've been dropped, that unfold a small set of sun-following venetian blinds that gather power and use dragonfly-style neural net vision to detect motion and identify foe as not-friend. (Friends have the AES-encrypted countersign of the day.) Lay those down in a circle thirty yards deep and a hundred yards wide, and you have a nasty defensive perimeter serving the same function as a Roman palisade. This stuff doesn't have to be high tech.
``Tension, apprehension & dissension have begun!'' - Duffy Wyg&, in Alfred Bester's _The Demolished Man_
This guy is a genius! With an imagination like his, he should write science fiction!
-- Boycott Shell
Actually, the idea of *not* attacking infrastructure - indeed the whole concept of "collateral damage" as something to avoid - is a pretty recent fad. No one especially cared about collateral damage in Viet Nam. I don't think the term even existed then. In WW II, by contrast, infrastructure was attacked on purpose. By everyone. The Germans tried it against the British with poor success - the V1 and V2 were more effective in producing terror than in producing any militarily valuable results and only served to harden British resolve, in the end - and the United States and Britain both deliberately attacked German infrastructure in Europe. An early and very successful example of that is the "dam buster" bombs developed to destroy hydro-electric dams in the Ruhr to hamper German industrial production. Many German cities were bombed extensively, and Dresden was largely destroyed in a firebombing attack.
In the Pacific, the United States bombed most Japanese cities flat. Much is made of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, but if you ever seen pictures of Tokyo taken in late 1945 and 1946, large sections of it don't look all that different. Asakusa was pretty much completely burned over as the result of incendiary attacks, as were many other large sections of Tokyo and other cities.
These attacks on civilians were quite deliberate. Everyone involved knew that lots of civilians would be killed and injured in massive attacks on infrastructure and either didn't care or viewed it as a benefit. The concept that civilians are not targets is a pretty recently evolution of warfare, if you take a long historical view. Al Qaeda and other terrorist organizations, in not drawing a line between civilians and soldiers, is not doing anything that Germany, the US, Britain, and Japan did not do in WW II. If you look at the conduct of all of those protagonists, it would not be hard to conclude that they all believed, in practice if not in philosophy, that there was essentially no such thing as a non-combatant.
All of this widespread bombing was aimed at destroying infrastructure as a means of crippling war production. Less emphasis is placed on attacking infrastructure now, largely because we can bring such overwhelming force to the battlefield that there is no standing army in the world that could long withstand it, and because it does no good against insurgencies and would only harm the image of the country bombing the infrastructure while increasing (in most cases) civilian resolve.
You are correct in pointing out, however, that infrastructure attacks could be the bread and butter of terrorist organizations. That we have seen so few of them around the world - and none (yet) in the United States points out that doing this isn't as easy as it sounds. Getting trained operatives into the United States and keeping them below the radar probably isn't terribly difficult, but keeping them secret while they prepare an attack and - especially - getting them the amount of explosives, poison, or whatever that they'd need to attack a significant infrastructure target and cause major loss of life/property/industrial/capacity/money is harder than it looks at first glance. It is also partly because their mindset seems to still favor the big spectacular attack a la 9/11, I'm sure, but in general, if it was really easy, they would have already done it. More than once.
What is to be solved here?
(Intermediate concluions omited to brevity.)
Of course, A3 is the only postulated that may be wrong, but if it is right we will never have a computer that acts as our mind, and if it is wrong the main conclusion is wrong. I fail to see a problem asking to be solved.
Rethinking email