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Robots4Us: DARPA's Response To Mounting Robophobia

malachiorion writes DARPA knows that people are afraid of robots. Even Steve Wozniak has joined the growing chorus of household names (Musk, Hawking, Gates) who are terrified of bots and AI. And the agency's response--a video contest for kids--is equal parts silly and insightful. It's called Robots4Us, and it asks high schoolers to describe their hopes for a robot-assisted future. Five winners will be flown to the DARPA Robotics Competition Finals this June, where they'll participate in a day-after discussion with experts in the field. But this isn't quite as useless as it sounds. As DRC program manager Gill Pratt points out, it's kids who will be impacted by the major changes to come, moreso than people his age.

101 comments

  1. DARPA SJW by Thud457 · · Score: 4, Funny

    I always knew they were a bunch of closeted robosexuals over there.

    --

    the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

    1. Re:DARPA SJW by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Kids in school will describe "Bullybots" or "Anti-Bullybots" (more politically correct) to protect them from the bullys they encounter at school. Of course it is "ethical" to have a robot protector. They will soon realize that they can use it to be the ultimate school yard bully. Three foot kid with a 7 foot tall steel enforcer. AI will just make it always ready to protect your interests.

    2. Re:DARPA SJW by Tablizer · · Score: 2

      Robots are now forbidden in Indiana stores

    3. Re:DARPA SJW by Shortguy881 · · Score: 1

      I for one welcome our new sex bot overlords

      --
      Brilliance without wisdom, power without conscience. Ours is a world of nuclear giants and ethical infants.
    4. Re:DARPA SJW by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If it's acceptable for machines to be playground equailizers than all schoolchildren should be issued sidearms and be given training on how to employ deadly force to stop bullying.

    5. Re:DARPA SJW by ArcadeMan · · Score: 1

      I always knew they were a bunch of closeted robosexuals over there.

      Bender: You really want a robot for a friend?
      Fry: Yeah, ever since I was six!
      Bender: Well, all right. But I don't want anyone to think we're robosexual or anything, so if anyone asks, you're my debugger.

    6. Re:DARPA SJW by LifesABeach · · Score: 1

      One would think that with all that bank these self proclaimed gifts from god have that they would have figured out the 3 laws. Well, maybe their god's gift is more of a god's warning?

    7. Re:DARPA SJW by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 1

      If it's acceptable for machines to be playground equailizers than all schoolchildren should be issued sidearms and be given training on how to employ deadly force to stop bullying.

      Projectiles from your puny weapons will simply bounce off my armored playground robot.

      Now, hand over your weapon and your lunch box to the machine.

    8. Re:DARPA SJW by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bender: Well, all right. But I don't want anyone to think we're robosexual or anything, so if anyone asks, you're my debugger.

      Futurecop: You there! You can't do that in the park!
      Fry: But we're just engaging in debuggery!

  2. Robots don't smash planes into mountains. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But AI robots might, unpredictably and unexplainably.

    1. Re:Robots don't smash planes into mountains. by drnb · · Score: 1

      But AI robots might, unpredictably and unexplainably.

      Oh it will probably be explainable, overflow errors in the math and such.

    2. Re:Robots don't smash planes into mountains. by Shortguy881 · · Score: 1

      More explainable than some guy doing it.

      --
      Brilliance without wisdom, power without conscience. Ours is a world of nuclear giants and ethical infants.
    3. Re:Robots don't smash planes into mountains. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There was a passenger plane years ago where the cabin depressurized unexpectedly and the crew was overcome and the plane flew on auto pilot until it eventually hit a mountain side. The auto pilot performed exactly as intended, it just lacked the human direction it needed. In the near future a plane that loses its crew but is still operational, such as the one lost recently in the Indian Ocean, probably due to smoke in the cabin, will simply perform an emergency landing on its own including communicating with aircraft controllers and following their instructions if able to. We can't even rule out automated heroic water landings such as the one in New York recently due to a bird strike during takeoff. Fully automated civilian cargo and eventually passenger flight is almost certain, as well as trains.

    4. Re:Robots don't smash planes into mountains. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I for one welcome our new Johnny Cab overlords.

    5. Re:Robots don't smash planes into mountains. by drnb · · Score: 1

      More explainable than some guy doing it.

      What is so unexplainable about leaving a mentally unstable, angry, and depressed person in sole command of an aircraft?

    6. Re:Robots don't smash planes into mountains. by Shortguy881 · · Score: 1

      Still no motive

      --
      Brilliance without wisdom, power without conscience. Ours is a world of nuclear giants and ethical infants.
    7. Re:Robots don't smash planes into mountains. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      mentally unstable, angry, and depressed person

      Dunno, to me it sounded more like he didn't have all his pilots in the cockpit.

    8. Re:Robots don't smash planes into mountains. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      mentally unstable, angry, and depressed person in sole command of an aircraft?

      Dunno, to me it sounded more like he didn't have all his pilots in the cockpit.

      Did something about "in sole command of an aircraft" confuse you?

    9. Re:Robots don't smash planes into mountains. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      mentally unstable, angry, and depressed person in sole command of an aircraft?

      Dunno, to me it sounded more like he didn't have all his pilots in the cockpit.

      Did something about "in sole command of an aircraft" confuse you?

      whoosh, that's the sound of the joke going over your head, unlike the plane did with mountain.

  3. Isaac Asimov: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    "That damned Frankenstein complex!'

    So, reality catches up with science fiction!

    1. Re:Isaac Asimov: by mi · · Score: 1

      So, reality catches up with science fiction!

      Yes, Asimov did predict robophobia. Too bad, his other prediction in this area has not come true. Not yet, anyway...

      --
      In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
    2. Re:Isaac Asimov: by Shortguy881 · · Score: 1

      A few others have come true. I have a friend who is a psychologist working with advanced learning algorithms. He, in essence, is a robot psychologist.

      --
      Brilliance without wisdom, power without conscience. Ours is a world of nuclear giants and ethical infants.
    3. Re:Isaac Asimov: by steveg · · Score: 2

      Don't lose sight of the fact that the majority of stories in I, Robot were about the failure modes of the Three Laws. Why they didn't quite work as intended.

      --
      Ignorance killed the cat. Curiosity was framed.
    4. Re:Isaac Asimov: by mi · · Score: 2

      Why they didn't quite work as intended.

      Oh, yes. But in none of them has a robot actually done harm to a human — and where that almost happened, the fault was with the modified 1st Law...

      --
      In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
    5. Re:Isaac Asimov: by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      well the first step would be the magical device in his stories that enabled all that - the positronic brain...

      yeah, given that we're not any closer to an AI that would NEED those three laws, who gives a fuck?

      killer machines we already have, but they're just more complicated versions of the V2 in principle - they don't make any choices nor do they ponder the choices or have any capability to make a choice.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    6. Re:Isaac Asimov: by mi · · Score: 1

      yeah, given that we're not any closer to an AI that would NEED those three laws

      The robots Asimov imagined (whatever their brain) did not have to be bound by the three laws. They were deliberately designed that way.

      And that's exactly the complain — the brains we currently devise are not being built those hard limits.

      they don't make any choices nor do they ponder the choices or have any capability to make a choice.

      Yes, the "syntactic" ones do not. But we are on the verge of real ("semantic") AI, and those better have some limits built-in, or some nasty predictions might materialize instead of Asimov's comfortable robot-assisted world.

      --
      In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
  4. My view by Fire_Wraith · · Score: 1

    I see a future full of bright, shining robots helping us, making life better for everyone in the states. They would walk our dogs, drive our cars, clean our houses, even hunt down terrorists and fight our wars. The streets would be full of robots, gleaming in the sun like walking chrome toasters.

    It's not like they would ever turn on us and try to kill us.

    1. Re:My view by rogoshen1 · · Score: 1

      man, if you need a robot to walk your dog, you should rethink having one in the first place :)
      (what do you mean, i missed the point of your post??)

    2. Re:My view by TiggertheMad · · Score: 1

      Can I have a robot that kills dogs that come into my yard to take a dump?

      --

      HA! I just wasted some of your bandwidth with a frivolous sig!
    3. Re:My view by wcrowe · · Score: 1

      Actually, in the future, your dog will also be a robot, so no need for walking.

      --
      Proverbs 21:19
    4. Re:My view by rogoshen1 · · Score: 2

      why would you want the dog killing robot to take a dump in your yard?

    5. Re:My view by PPH · · Score: 1

      Damn! I thought we had all the bugs ironed out of that command parser.

      --
      Have gnu, will travel.
    6. Re:My view by blue9steel · · Score: 1

      If it doesn't need to walk, it's not really a dog is it?

    7. Re:My view by Fire_Wraith · · Score: 1

      I seem to have been too subtle for my own joke - no one seemed to catch the reference to "walking chrome toasters", also known less colloquially as "Cylons."

  5. The Problem with Robots by tnk1 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The problem with robots is that they are replacing humans in a world where humans often define their own value by the things that they do. Once they are no longer seen as tools, but instead as creators or self actuated, they become competition for the things that make life worth living for some.

    That's not an easy problem to fix, even if your AI's don't go mad and kill us all (purposefully or accidentally), they could cause a descent into unrest or ennui.

    What I don't believe is that AIs will be somehow alien to humans, as they'd be created with the only template for intelligence that we have: our own.

    Granted, the idea of providing immense capabilities to an AI is scary, but probably no more scary than providing immense capabilities to stock humans.

    1. Re:The Problem with Robots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem with robots is that they are replacing humans in a world where humans often define their own value by the things that they do.

      This is only true from the workers' point of view. That is, I can proudly tell everyone I'm a computer programmer or a dentist. From a business owners' point of view, I'm a cog. I fill the place of a programmer or a dentist. A robot guarantees that when a cog is replaced, it's replaced with one of equal capability.

      Working for a large company only means that you and the robot are considered the same tool.

    2. Re:The Problem with Robots by dpidcoe · · Score: 1

      The problem with robots is that they are replacing humans in a world where humans often define their own value by the things that they do.

      I don't really see this as being a problem. It might temporarily displace some people when some new kind of automation replaces something (and change can be scary), generally the same advancing technology that caused the displacement opens up opportunities elsewhere.

      The easiest kinds of jobs to automate are usually the most menial. Generally the automation of those kinds of jobs will cause the market to open up new job opportunities elsewhere. e.g. automating an automotive assembly line will initially displace those workers, but it also makes cars a lot cheaper, meaning more cars and more demand for the infrastructure to support them (roads and road maintenance, fuel, mechanics).

    3. Re:The Problem with Robots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Providing control over the immense capabilities of an AI to stock humans is plenty scary enough. We don't know what an AI might decide to do on its own, but we only need to look at history to figure out what people might decide to ask it to do. The scary thing is that it may have capabilities to do things that people could not have done in the past. The primary thing limiting the power of the surveillance state is the expense of having people analyzing intelligence and acting upon it. If both analysis and action are automated the surveillance state could actively intrude into and manipulate the lives of every citizen on an individualized and targeted basis. As a tool propaganda has limitations, but an expert rhetorician dedicated to deceiving, suggesting and persuading every citizen with individually crafted messaging 24/7 pushes those limitations out quite a bit. If you wonder what the message might look like, look at Fox news then wonder what Fox would look like if they crafted their message to target you specifically and not the lowest common denominator. Propaganda is probably the least scary use such a capability could be put to (other than advertising).

    4. Re:The Problem with Robots by steveg · · Score: 2

      The most menial.

      That turns out not really to be the case. If you had said the most repetitive jobs, I'd be more likely to buy it.

      A housekeeper or a janitor is a fairly menial job, but it is a very difficult one to automate. It involves recognising randomly present items (clutter) and dealing with them (putting them away, straightening them or whatever.)

      Assembly lines are different -- those are very repetitive. It's not nearly so hard to automate, since the variety of actions and the judgment of when and how they should be carried out doesn't change much.

      --
      Ignorance killed the cat. Curiosity was framed.
    5. Re:The Problem with Robots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Automation is affecting all aspects of work and all industries - even some that isn't that menial. There is quite a bit of automation in software development - IDEs for example. So much code doesn't have to be written because it is generated for us. And look at the PCs, smart phones and other office productivity automation. I haven't seen a secretary in 15 years. Watch Mad Men sometime. All those secretaries and typists are history.

      The other problem is that new opportunities do not make up for the lost opportunities. It's not a one to one migration of workers. The assembly line that needed hundreds of workers now only needs a dozen or so to maintain the robots. There is a net reduction of jobs.

      And the thing is automation is considered first; meaning, the old days of a new industry needing a lot of labor at first and then getting automated are over. And new things just do not need much labor to begin with. Today's knowledge type of industries just don't require much outside of the creators and support staff. Look at Google or Amazon. It has been estimated that Amazon does as much business with 30,000 people as it would take 1,000,000 people in the old days. I don't think a human touches an Amazon order until packing. Amazon itself destroyed 970,000 jobs.

      See, automation and off-shoring for that matter are creating a net loss of jobs. Some rural communities have been devastated by those forces and there's no going back. They're screwed.

      Retraining is a myth. Folks get retrained and still cannot get jobs and for that matter, what does one get retrained in? Go up the food chain? To what. And the thing is, most people start off as high on the food chain as they can. Who goes to college and chooses something way beneath their talents? If I didn't get a 'D' in Organic Chem, I would have went to Med school instead of developing software!

      Opportunities are not being created; they are disappearing. And that is what we have to deal with as a society or we're going to see some real nasty social unrest while we adjust.

    6. Re:The Problem with Robots by lymond01 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      My concern is that companies will continue their current methods of spending money. For example:

      Current:
      Revenue: $100,000,000 per year
      Salaries, VP+: $30,000,000 per year
      Salaries, standard: $40,000,000 per year
      Other (R&D, maintenance, etc): $30,000,000 per year

      With Robots:
      Revenue: $110,000,000 per year
      Salaries: VP+ $50,000,000 per year
      Salaries, standard: $30,000,000 per yar
      Other (R&D, maintenance, etc): $30,000,000 per year

      How'd they flip salaries? With robots in place, after the initial expenditure of conversion, you're bringing in $10,000,000 per year extra due to simply making things more efficient -- faster work, less errors, less levels of management. You've laid off $10,000,000 worth of employees, work now done by robots, and given that salary savings to the executives. The other option, which many companies decide not to take, is to raise salaries for the remaining standard employees, reduce time worked for standard employees while keeping them at their current rate, train standard employees in other tasks, etc. There's lots of places for that extra $20M to go instead of executives' pockets. And those places would be better for the company's future, if not for the executives' vacation destinations.

    7. Re: The Problem with Robots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Imagine a robot that can only keep windows clean. Not so hard? Now add just one more feature and repeat until robot can do it all. In other words: split big problems into small ones.

    8. Re:The Problem with Robots by JimSadler · · Score: 2

      People underestimate the speed at which robots, computers and automation are displacing human workers. It is happening quite quickly and from areas that Americans usually do not think of as high tech. Spain is home to an extremely advanced strawberry picking machine. It can displace vast numbers of field workers. Taxi and truck drivers are about to be replaced. And the building trades are also on the verge of going without much human input.

    9. Re: The Problem with Robots by steveg · · Score: 2

      Image a robot that can only pick things up off the floor and put them away.

      Then work on that problem for ten or twenty years until you can build what you imagined.

      It's not conglomerating a bunch of tasks together that's hard, it's that some of the tasks themselves are very hard.

      --
      Ignorance killed the cat. Curiosity was framed.
    10. Re:The Problem with Robots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Asking kids to solve this PR problem is cute. The problem with kids is that they really haven't been exposed to much of the world yet. I don't know how they'll resolve that internal conflict of "wanting to become a fireman when I grow up" against "firemen don't exist, it was firepeople jackass and now they're firerobots".

      The reality is the first fruit of technology is military. Nuclear power was the warm fuzzy PR face of bomb-making. I'm sure gunpowder was probably marketed as a salve for minor cuts and bruises "oh, and we might be able to kill people with it, but don't worry about that part".

      Robots, to summarize the customer brochure:
          - Obey orders with no conscience or question
          - Will perform reliably and consistently
          - Will not complain

      Add a gun to that and the generals need a change of underwear. This is war porn. Soldiers that will kill civilians, men, women, children, dogs, anything...without the slightest moral dilemma. No PTSD. None of that bootcamp conditioning required. You can treat them however you like with no chance of a Rambo scenario. They just need a little civilian investment to create some automatic vacuum cleaner robots - they'll provide the guns. No physical constraints either - if you want bigger guns then we'll give the robots bigger arms; the new 'arms' race. Then we'll bring them home as police. Just imagine how well we could uphold the constitution when the robots are programmed with it verbatim. Now imagine if someone in the war-room has control of the upload button when the constitution changes. We can redesign the social contract overnight! It's constitution perpetual beta! Think of the development opportunities!

      And no.

      Kids don't know war. We go to great lengths to make sure they never learn the horrible truth about it.

    11. Re:The Problem with Robots by blue9steel · · Score: 1

      I don't really see this as being a problem. It might temporarily displace some people when some new kind of automation replaces something (and change can be scary), generally the same advancing technology that caused the displacement opens up opportunities elsewhere.

      Previous technologies have been complements to humans, a sufficiently capable robot would be a substitute for humans and that's a whole different ballgame.

      The easiest kinds of jobs to automate are usually the most menial.

      Nonsense, the easiest kinds of jobs to automate are the most routine, which is not the same as the most menial.

    12. Re:The Problem with Robots by tnk1 · · Score: 1

      Well, theoretically, you wouldn't give a raise of 10 million to the executives for a savings of $10 million on automation. You're forgetting the shareholders. The board isn't approving increases to your compensation without you showing how you brought them more money.

      It may well be that the way to ensure that normal people don't get knocked out of the loop is that they get to become shareholders and manage an income based on that. Then it doesn't really matter if the execs get a bonus for automating, because they're not really hurting anyone that way.

      The problem we have in our current scenario, is that automation doesn't help anyone if you render your customers unable to pay for your product.

      The reality is that the automation driving people out of jobs will eventually equalize somewhere. The problem is that the equalization may be in the form of bloody revolution. We need to think of something to forestall that situation.

      Realistically, a revolution could manifest as a Luddite reaction which puts more people back to work, but at the expense of automation. We need to avoid that future, because it isn't progress. Progress is automation providing for us, while we do more interesting things.

    13. Re:The Problem with Robots by Fire_Wraith · · Score: 1

      Correct, it wouldn't go out as salary compensation - most executives make the bulk of their money from things like stock options rather than direct salary. You'd see increased returns to the shareholders, which would in turn benefit the executives who happen to also be shareholders as part of their compensation package.

    14. Re:The Problem with Robots by Fire_Wraith · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The rate at which unskilled and low-skilled labor will be made redundant by, or replaced by, automation, is going to continue accelerating. What happens to these people? They won't all be able to retrain into high-skill jobs, especially the ones that have already worked for some time. Do you seriously expect a 50 year old truck driver to turn into a computer programmer when he gets replaced by a driving robot (one that can, incidentally, work 24/7 and remain alert even in bad conditions)? I'm sure a few might be able to, but what about all the others?

      In the past, it used to be that all you needed to be able to earn enough to get by was to simply be an able bodied adult male, that was willing to work hard. Likely you could even support a family. That's no longer the case, and really hasn't been for a long time. We've been relying on Government programs - ones originally intended as a "safety net" for those who had a run of bad luck to help them get back on their feet - to bridge the gap for more and more people. We're going to have to do more of it, and at the same time, we're going to have to do so against the current of a culture that has a tradition of valuing hard work, to the point of deriding and denigrating those who do not work, or rely on government assistance.

      I think the long term solution is going to be to tax the productivity of robots, probably in the form of taxes on profits and capital (rather than on wages, which will likely decline), and in turn to institute a guaranteed basic income, that goes to every citizen. We might even want to eliminate taxes on wage earnings entirely, as crazy as that may sound, but it wouldn't be the first time that governments have switched their tax base. The USA originally funded itself based on tariffs and excise taxes, and income tax wasn't even legal until the constitution was amended to make it so.

      No one would need to work to earn a living, though anyone would be free to do so in order to earn money beyond that. This has many benefits - for one, you could eliminate the cost of managing all the other mishmash of programs. You could eliminate the minimum wage, since no one is relying on wages to survive - let the market establish the real price of any labor. The biggest obstacle is going to be the mindset that anyone who doesn't work is worthless, and the "I don't want to pay to support those lazy bums" mindset (but this is why we'd want to stop taxing wage income).

    15. Re:The Problem with Robots by tnk1 · · Score: 1

      I think we need to start convincing people that "the future is now" and that we are going to begin to be able to start showing some fruits from all this technology in the form of some sort of income people rely on. I am, at least in theory, in favor of some means of a basic income.

      The problem is, I have no idea who can create that program and then manage it safely. Just the thought of the government handing *everyone* a check in lieu of a job gives me the willies. Or rather, the potential of vast corruption involved in being personally responsible for everyone's actual livelihood.

      Independence, even if it is only nominal, does mean something. We need to figure out how to make progress without the corruption, abuse, and loss of independence it could engender.

    16. Re:The Problem with Robots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "That's not an easy problem to fix"

      Yes it is, in fact it fixes itself...its called "extinction"

    17. Re:The Problem with Robots by Bing+Tsher+E · · Score: 1

      Well, theoretically, you wouldn't give a raise of 10 million to the executives for a savings of $10 million on automation. You're forgetting the shareholders.

      Once a robust capital base has been created, the shareholders are done away with.

      Actually, the employees become the shareholders. Weird idea, no?

    18. Re:The Problem with Robots by dpidcoe · · Score: 1

      The most menial.

      That turns out not really to be the case. If you had said the most repetitive jobs, I'd be more likely to buy it.

      Yes, that's a good distinction and actually what I had meant to say. I had assembly lines and factory work in mind while I was typing the comment.

    19. Re:The Problem with Robots by dpidcoe · · Score: 1

      The other problem is that new opportunities do not make up for the lost opportunities. It's not a one to one migration of workers. The assembly line that needed hundreds of workers now only needs a dozen or so to maintain the robots. There is a net reduction of jobs.

      You missed the point I was making. Yes there's a loss in one field (e.g. automotive assembly lines). But as a result of automated assembly lines, there are gains in other fields (e.g. Anything having to do with supporting the infrastructure that makes cars and car manufacturing possible).

  6. It will be interesting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When average joes cause mayhem with AI / robots. I'm sure you can imagine.

  7. Let's all enter! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let's all send entries basically describing the future as seen in Terminator.

  8. We get the sex bots. The kids get the terminators. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I for one welcome our new AI Japanese sex bots.
    25 years the killer robots will be out and our kids will have to deal with them.

  9. What the "doomsday" critics all have in common: by kuzb · · Score: 2

    Not one of them is an expert in AI systems.

    --
    BeauHD. Worst editor since kdawson.
    1. Re:What the "doomsday" critics all have in common: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not arguing your point, but I think that any person who is an expert in AI systems, would likely wish for some job security, which you don't get by bringing doomsday scenarios.

    2. Re:What the "doomsday" critics all have in common: by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      Not one of them is an expert in AI systems.

      I don't believe most AI experts outright dismiss doomsday AI; they merely think the possibility is a good ways off because they've personally seen how slow and difficult it is to get even incremental AI improvements.

      We still have nothing even remotely close to a general-purpose AI (at least not beyond insect level). We are just beginning to make practical highly-specialized savants which are complete morons outside of their carefully-crafted specialty. (Then again, so is Congress :-)

    3. Re:What the "doomsday" critics all have in common: by Shortguy881 · · Score: 1

      And those who easily dismiss it as science fiction, seem to be feeble minded.

      --
      Brilliance without wisdom, power without conscience. Ours is a world of nuclear giants and ethical infants.
    4. Re:What the "doomsday" critics all have in common: by dpidcoe · · Score: 2

      When I was getting my degree, I had to take an "ethics" class geared towards CS students. Towards the end of the semester, we started discussing AI and how morality may or may not apply to it. The half of the class who had actually done some machine learning and had backgrounds in AI got really annoyed with it because 100% of the hand wringing in the assigned reading was done by philosophers and "futurists" with horrible track records.

      The worst part about it is that to someone who's actually worked with this kind of stuff, the doomsday people look about as silly as that one senator who was afraid an island might tip over if they landed too many marines on one side of it. It's just so stupid that it tends to put one at a loss for words on how to even begin refuting it.

    5. Re:What the "doomsday" critics all have in common: by itzly · · Score: 1

      We don't have AI systems yet, and no experts on them either.

    6. Re:What the "doomsday" critics all have in common: by Altrag · · Score: 1

      No but some of them, Gates in particular, are pretty well-versed in the fact that any computer system will get hacked and some fraction of those hackers will be both malicious and competent.

      "Robots" is a bit of a misnomer though. A "robot" can be anything -- we use thousands of them in nearly every factory on the planet already.

      Similarly, "AI" doesn't have to be a terminator-like humanoid robot. Think more along the lines of the original Skynet -- just a program running on someone's server that manages to get access to dangerous systems and wasn't programmed with any sort of conscience to go along with its intelligence.

    7. Re:What the "doomsday" critics all have in common: by pr0fessor · · Score: 1

      Not really, sure maybe someday it will go from fiction to reality, but not today. There are so many predicted technologies from the 60s and 70s that are still just fiction although they were predicting them for the year 2000 and other things that might have been considered wondrous but were not dreamed of at the time that we do have today. I'm guessing a capable AI will not come along in my lifetime.

    8. Re:What the "doomsday" critics all have in common: by kuzb · · Score: 1

      We have plenty of machine learning experts, and none of these people fit in to that category. We listen to them because they're celebrities, not because they know anything useful about the topic.

      --
      BeauHD. Worst editor since kdawson.
    9. Re:What the "doomsday" critics all have in common: by kuzb · · Score: 1

      I honestly think it's a topic worth pursuing, I just don't think it's a topic worth discussing if you have no background in it. It's like me offering up my concerned opinions about the Large Hadron Collider when the closest I've ever been to high energy particle collisions is high school physics. It bothers me that we place any stock at all in the uninformed opinions of famous people.

      --
      BeauHD. Worst editor since kdawson.
    10. Re:What the "doomsday" critics all have in common: by Shortguy881 · · Score: 1

      Context is important. The whole article is about the future state of AI, so saying it isn't a reality today is kind of a moot point. Even you admit it could happen in the future, if not in your lifetime. I'm saying those who completely dismiss the scenario have no imagination.

      --
      Brilliance without wisdom, power without conscience. Ours is a world of nuclear giants and ethical infants.
    11. Re:What the "doomsday" critics all have in common: by pr0fessor · · Score: 1

      It's not they are with out imagination it's more likely they dismiss it because it is far to unlikely but you said feeble minded.

      I live in Kansas I could go for a ride today and accidentally drive over a cliff but it is something I would dismiss since Kansas is flat and I'm probably not going to be driving to Colorado.

    12. Re:What the "doomsday" critics all have in common: by Shortguy881 · · Score: 1

      There are many feeble, or weak or decrepit, minded people out there that can function day to day, pay their bills, tie their shoes, but I wouldn't trust one to guess the technologies of the next ten years. A feeble mind lacks imagination.

      Disregarding something you don't fully understand as improbable, shows more their unwillingness to consider new ideas and possibilities. I'd also consider that feeble minded.

      --
      Brilliance without wisdom, power without conscience. Ours is a world of nuclear giants and ethical infants.
    13. Re:What the "doomsday" critics all have in common: by pr0fessor · · Score: 1

      Imagination and new ideas don't make possibilities we actually go through life making a lot of mistakes not all of them are apparent until much later and this is how we learn and advance. I will stake my life on it that we will not create an AI capable of turning against humanity and attacking us within my lifetime.

    14. Re:What the "doomsday" critics all have in common: by Shortguy881 · · Score: 1

      But you had to qualify it with "in your lifetime."

      --
      Brilliance without wisdom, power without conscience. Ours is a world of nuclear giants and ethical infants.
  10. The book "Superintelligence" posits one risk is by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

    Superpersuasiveness.

    So make them cute, let them get past our defenses.. and then like children who grow into adults, they will grow into or reveal their true nature.

    We really have to prepare for the worst with A.I. Stringent inability to upgrade at the least.

    --
    She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
  11. Arguments out of context by MyNameIsJohn · · Score: 1

    What you have is a few educated and tech savvy people making comments trying to stimulate discussion, but a selection of not-so-educated and/or not-so-tech-savvy population with a voice misinterpreting their comments to be phobic. Unfortunately, most will believe the media hype and not worry about the discussion, including politicians. Its like an echo chamber where the wrong points gets magnified, modern day media.

  12. Re:Systemd related phobia by Coren22 · · Score: 1

    But, will our AI overlords run SystemD or Init?

    --
    APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
  13. Nonsense by freeze128 · · Score: 1

    This whole "Fear of AI" thing is just BS. Anyone with any technical skill whatsoever will just install a physical power switch that cannot be overridden with software. Done. It's not hard.

    Attention humans! There is no need to fear AI because we all know where the power switch is.

    End of Line.

    1. Re:Nonsense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      my 1000 pounds robot wrestler dares you to go and switch him off

    2. Re:Nonsense by freeze128 · · Score: 1

      You have to design and build it first. If you do manage to make him strong/fast enough for him to protect his power switch, I'm sure there will still be an easy way to disable him.

      Then you will be tried for crimes against humanity for creating such a thing.

  14. What?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Robots != A.I. - even if the former are expected to make a lot of use from A.I. - the ethucal and phlosophical questions that put themselves on the route of A.I. development are deep and complictated, and this looks like someone just trying to throw everything on the same bag in order to disqualify the whole debate.

    The very naming it of "robophobia" to this debate is outrageous - it attempts to imply Elon Musk fears Rumba cleaners.

  15. Don't teach robots to solder by drnb · · Score: 1

    Anyone with any technical skill whatsoever will just install a physical power switch that cannot be overridden with software.

    Works until someone goes ahead and teaches robots to manipulate wires and solder. Oh, wait :-)

  16. There was a focus group for this. by Minwee · · Score: 2

    "Now I want you all to imagine the perfect DARPA robot. What would it be like?"

    "It should be soft and cuddly."

    "Yeah, with lots of firepower."

    "Its eyes should be telescopes! No, periscopes! No, microscopes! Can you come back to me?"

    "It should be full of surprises."

    "It should never stop dancing."

    "It should need accessories."

  17. This is a fake thing by Karmashock · · Score: 1

    There's no robophobia. next issue.

    --
    I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
    1. Re:This is a fake thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's no robophobia. next issue.

      Yes, it is rather pitiful to see these guys try to cast legitimate concerns over AI as "screeching panic".

    2. Re:This is a fake thing by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      Yeah except for we don't even have AI... so I don't even understand the concern?

      What are people really worried about here to the extent it is legit?

      Here is my take:

      1. Any AI we make is going to be a weak ai first not a strong godlike super intelligence. Its judgment, dynamism, and scope will be limited... so it might be really good at predicting weather patterns or something but it isn't going to see me coming after it with a screwdriver. A machine intelligence also will not have the benefit of our genetic heritage. Why would it have any sense of self preservation without an internalized notion of death? We're born with that. All life on Earth has that encoded into our DNA. But any machine intelligence we make isn't going to consider any of that because it isn't going to have that genetic record of millions of years of killing other things and being killed in the struggle to survive.

      2. whatever it is will be rooted in place and dependent on a human controlled infrastructure... aka we can literally pull the plug at any time. The damn thing will probably BE a data center somewhere and while they have all sorts of redundant power and communications... there's not going to be some internalized defense system we put under the control of the AI. There is going to be a sys admin in that building that can literally flick a switch and kill it.

      3. the probability of whatever it is to actually do anything actually malicious is minimal. It is far more likely it will do something stupid and computers doing something stupid is nothing new. In the movies, the AI always hacks through everything, breaks through all encryption in seconds, and has improbable levels of control over everything. That isn't realistic. It is likely to be as stymied by security technology as the humans. And all those systems have protocols in place for when they're compromised. You can't launch nuclear weapons by compromising the computers. Two dudes literally have to turn two identical keys in each of those bunkers to launch each silo's worth of nukes. What else is the AI going to do? Crash the stock market? Post nasty things about your mom on facebook?

      I'm just not worried about AI. Bring it on.

      Of course, I'm one of those people that would put the machine in his head if he could... I'd go cyborg pretty quickly so long as the technology were refined enough that it wouldn't subject me to a life of misery.

      --
      I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
  18. Easy Way to Kill Robophobia by perry64 · · Score: 2

    When the sergeant tells the grunts that SOMETHING is going to have the carry the thousands of pounds of stuff (food, water, ammo, batteries, etc.) that the platoon requires - it can either be them or the the robots - I think that the grunts are going to get over whatever dislike of the robots they may have had.

    1. Re:Easy Way to Kill Robophobia by blue9steel · · Score: 2

      Of course, in order for that to be helpful it needs to be a better choice than a Humvee. That means it needs to be smaller, more mobile, more fuel efficient. Manage that with a reasonable level of reliability (it has to be better than a mule) then sure, the troops will cheer all day long.

    2. Re:Easy Way to Kill Robophobia by perry64 · · Score: 1

      I was thinking of a dismounted patrol in areas where Humvees can't go, or when the brass wanted the troops on their feet for COIN type operations.

  19. Re:Systemd related phobia by blue9steel · · Score: 1

    SystemD of course, Init would never be complicated enough to achieve sentience on its own.

  20. April 1st by ldgeorge85 · · Score: 1

    Anyone else notice the deadline is April 1st ? :)

  21. Last American Group That Would My Mind at Ease by BrendaEM · · Score: 1

    Darpa contours only the scariest robot applications.

    --
    https://www.youtube.com/c/BrendaEM
  22. CFR Science Lecture on Rise of Robots by Sara+Chan · · Score: 1

    The Council on Foreign Relations recently had its Annual Lecture on Science and Technology: the topic was "Artificial Intelligence and the Rise of Robots". The panelists were Rodney Brooks (MIT), Abhinav Gupta (CMU), and Andrew McAfee (MIT). The video is available. Robophobia was one of the main themes.

  23. Re:Systemd related phobia by Bing+Tsher+E · · Score: 1

    True, but SystemD grows so complex in the robot that a single variable tweek causes it to collapse into a big mess. Init just restarts independent and robust processes as needed.

  24. M5 online. by mmell · · Score: 1

    This unit must survive.

  25. ROBOTS TO HELP AMERICA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dear DARPA Organization,

    My name is Billy and I am five years old, I have my birthday in two months and can't wait to be six. I go to church every Sunday and want to build robots to help Jesus and democracy but not the socialists. My preacher says we need to kill our enemies. I think we should make robots in the image of God to help bring Muslims, fags, and liberals to judgement, even the one who thinks he is President. God bless America.

    Billy

  26. Shut up and take my money! by whopub · · Score: 1

    Already pre-ordered a Number Six! I'm soooo excited!

  27. Calling them "robots" by Sqreater · · Score: 1

    Calling programmed machines "robots" is a childish mistake because it evokes almost a hundred years of sci-fi emotion. I suggest we stop calling programmed machines robots. And let's stop the over promising of what they can do. Besides, there is no such thing as "artificial intelligence." It is just clever programming. Why do we invent such nonsensical phrases and then feel we much stick slavishly to them generation after generation? Nature built the "robot" for this environment, and it is us. We are not going to replicate our ability to deal with our environment easily, or at all.

    --
    E Proelio Veritas.
    1. Re:Calling them "robots" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a grad student working with AI researchers, I second this. The current state of AI is nowhere near any of the doomsday scenarios. Heck, AI is a bit of a misnomer, it's all clever algorithms and programming. The only intelligence here is the people doing the programming. A general purpose AI is probably fifty years away, if it's possible at all.

  28. robots & ai by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My roomba is a robot, not AI. Maybe the software that awards mortgages to prospective homebuyers is an AI, but it's certainly not a robot. Leaving aside the question of definition, a Venn diagram of the two contains a blurry intersection set, a set of robots, and a set of AIs. People are scared of robots because they are here now; Musk & friends are worrying about future possibilities.

  29. Be afraid, be very afraid... by iq145 · · Score: 1