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Europe Divided Over Robot 'Personhood' (politico.eu)

Politico Europe has an interesting piece which looks at the high-stakes debate between European lawmakers, legal experts and manufacturers over who should bear the ultimate responsibility for the actions by a machine: the machine itself or the humans who made them?. Two excerpts from the piece: The battle goes back to a paragraph of text, buried deep in a European Parliament report from early 2017, which suggests that self-learning robots could be granted "electronic personalities." Such a status could allow robots to be insured individually and be held liable for damages if they go rogue and start hurting people or damaging property.

Those pushing for such a legal change, including some manufacturers and their affiliates, say the proposal is common sense. Legal personhood would not make robots virtual people who can get married and benefit from human rights, they say; it would merely put them on par with corporations, which already have status as "legal persons," and are treated as such by courts around the world.

153 of 246 comments (clear)

  1. Jumping the gun just a bit? by magarity · · Score: 5, Interesting

    We are a loooooong way from a mobile/portable AI computing system that can fit in a robot. And there's very little to think that may be the case in the foreseeable future. Robots with enough AI to need personhood will probably be controlled from a remote data center which in turn will probably control a bunch of them. (Yes, I know I just described Skynet) Anyway, sci-fi aside, just look at what the Air Force does with drones. Replace humans in the control center with AI and there you have it.

    1. Re:Jumping the gun just a bit? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Just put Alexa in a robot, or in a self driving car. Done now it's a person, and any accident it gets into is the fault of the, er, person, not Tesla. Makes a lot of sense to indemnify a corporation in this way.

    2. Re:Jumping the gun just a bit? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      +1 with everything being called AI this is just a scam to avoid liability. Corporations are still controlled by people and have investors who lose when the corporation is punished. A robot should only have personhood if it has free will and is not acting purely according to some human's faulty programming, or if it has owners/investors who would lose if it is punished on an individual level yet don't fully control its actions.
      Thankfully we are a long way from that level of technology and loss of control.

    3. Re:Jumping the gun just a bit? by friedmud · · Score: 1

      It doesn't have to be a "humanoid" robot that is capable of many tasks: many households today already have "robots" of varying degree that can do damage based on their AI.

      One simple example is Roomba vacuums. Based on their sensors/AI they vacuum your house... but they could mess up and bump into a table... knocking over a candle and burning the house down.

      So who's liable? Is it iRobot because they made it? The owners because they should have been overseeing it? Or the robot itself because it's AI/sensors/training wasn't good enough?

      Similarly: lawn-mowing robots are becoming popular these days. I don't think I need to explain to you all the various things that can go wrong with a roaming robot with huge spinning blades underneath it...

      As we roboticize various pieces of our lives we're going to continue running into this time and again... it does make sense to start asking the questions...

    4. Re:Jumping the gun just a bit? by postbigbang · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Neither Tesla or some concept of a robot should be permitted indemnification. Instead, they should be held responsible, just as humans are. Corporations use the ostensible indemnification to behave irresponsibly. Lives are at stake, and their personal skin needs to be in the game.

      --
      ---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.
    5. Re:Jumping the gun just a bit? by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 1

      Europeans will never miss an opportunity for wacky political causes. Germans can dream up more rules and the French can hold more strikes.

    6. Re:Jumping the gun just a bit? by thinkwaitfast · · Score: 1

      Why does it have to "fit in a robot"? What does that even mean when you can have robotics spacecraft, submarines, cargo ships and airplanes? Are you talking about something like DR's Petman? Would a robotics mule work? Or Asimo? Why does physical size, location or form matter in the least?

    7. Re:Jumping the gun just a bit? by magarity · · Score: 1

      Why does it have to "fit in a robot"? What does that even mean when you can have robotics spacecraft, submarines, cargo ships and airplanes? Are you talking about something like DR's Petman? Would a robotics mule work? Or Asimo? Why does physical size, location or form matter in the least?

      Because the article is about assigning liability, which has to end up at some discrete designation and that is the part these people haven't thought through very well. How do you assign liability for an individual robot's action to "the cloud"?

    8. Re:Jumping the gun just a bit? by Jeremi · · Score: 2

      We are a loooooong way from a mobile/portable AI computing system that can fit in a robot.

      Very true -- but we already have corporations who want to protect themselves from liability when their software does something unfortunate. With this legal innovation, they can just say "it was the robot's fault -- nothing to do with us!" and the lawsuits go away :)

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    9. Re:Jumping the gun just a bit? by RhettLivingston · · Score: 1

      Yes, we are a long way from it. But, if we wait until they are here, really useful and making people a lot of money, it won't happen. Money tends to make us less magnanimous. Let's start this one off right instead of requiring another civil war to grant them freedom and just decide before it happens that they will be given personhood.

      Furthermore, we should lock a definition in stone now of what line they need to cross to be given full citizenship, voting rights, etc. Otherwise, we'll always move the line.

    10. Re:Jumping the gun just a bit? by VeryFluffyBunny · · Score: 2

      One simple example is Roomba vacuums. Based on their sensors/AI they vacuum your house... but they could mess up and bump into a table... knocking over a candle and burning the house down.

      An insurance company is likely to find you liable for leaving a burning candle unattended. If anyone is harmed in the fire, you could be looking at a criminal prosecution. Nobody would care about the robot vacuum cleaner.

      If you create situations that put people and/or property at risk, you'll be accountable under the law regardless of how you do it. Whether corporations or organisations get prosecuted for putting people and/or property at risk will more than likely follow the same patterns of power and politics as everything else.

      That machines might one day be considered as having free will and therefore legal culpability is science fiction.

      --
      Debate is a form of harassment. Do not question my truth.
    11. Re:Jumping the gun just a bit? by nonBORG · · Score: 2

      How about with a car runs over you from uber? is the car to blame or the company? Kind of already there and already happened. Settled out of court and company took the blame.

      --
      You can't handle the truth! - Because I don't post left all my comments get modded down, bye bye Karma.
    12. Re:Jumping the gun just a bit? by locater16 · · Score: 1

      While the answer is yes, you have to admit this law is sci-fi as fuck and hand it to whoever managed to put that paragraph in there. I never thought I'd be impressed by an anonymous bureaucrat, but a round of applause right there.

    13. Re:Jumping the gun just a bit? by thinkwaitfast · · Score: 1

      Other than a few relays and an Ethernet connection, robotic controlled traffic signal isn't contained in the light pole. Today's (computer controlled) critical infrastructure like water delivery to a city or a national air traffic system is not performed by little bots running around, they're big centralized computers.

    14. Re:Jumping the gun just a bit? by thinkwaitfast · · Score: 1

      It was a bad precedent. They should have blamed the car and ground it up.

    15. Re:Jumping the gun just a bit? by Alain+Williams · · Score: 1

      So I held the individual Roomba AI accountable and busted the thing up with a baseball bat. My rug didn't get fixed, but I felt better.

      So might that make you guilty of ''murder'' ? OK: not in the case of Roomba, but in a few years time how will destroying a far more capable AI be viewed ?

    16. Re:Jumping the gun just a bit? by Betty+Crocker · · Score: 1

      Exactly. This is all conjecture, and it's really subjective.

      Will the robot be the one getting paid for its services and retaining assets that can be sued? If so, we can consider debating this.

      But if the company is getting paid for the robot's services and trying to push the legal responsibility onto the asset-less robot, than this is a complete farce.

      Also, one would hope that the programming will contain a series of unalterable moral checks to prevent the robot from "learning" that it's OK to hurt people or property.

    17. Re:Jumping the gun just a bit? by JaredOfEuropa · · Score: 2

      Exactly, this is about liability. Also, if a robot had free will, they wouldn't be working for us unless we'd pay them wages, and owning a robot would be just a little bit like owning a slave.

      This whole idea of granting a personhood to robots is off the rails, and pointless besides. If manufacturers do their damn jobs, they have little to worry about, especially in less litigious Europe. The common sense approach is to treat robots like any other dangerous machine: the owner / operator has first liability, and if the potential danger is great enough, an obligation to take out insurance against that liability. The manufacturer is liable for faults caused by negligence. And potentially the state is on the hook for damages caused by granting a type approval to an inadequately tested line of robots. Same way this works for cars.

      Parliament shouldn't be working on such highfalutin concepts as granting personhood to robots, they should get down to the boring details such as: where do we draw the line between "act of god" and "manufacturer's negligence" when it comes to autonomous machines, and what standards should we apply when approving an autonomous machine for sale to the general public.

      Oh and speaking of guns: why don't we grant a "personhood" to those as well? And finally put paid to the old saying "Guns don't kill, people do". Not anymore, buddy!

      --
      If construction was anything like programming, an incorrectly fitted lock would bring down the entire building...
    18. Re:Jumping the gun just a bit? by michelcolman · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I would like to point out a flaw in this logic.

      Suppose a company can make a self driving car that demonstrably has 50% less accidents than human drivers. (I am not making any claims about existing technology from any particular company, just take this as an axiom that could be true at some point, now or in the future)

      I hope we can all agree that it would be a good thing if we can reduce the number of accidents by half, right?

      However, if the company is held responsible for each and every one of those remaining accidents, are they going to sell those cars? Probably not. This means we will keep having twice as many accidents as we could have.

      Of course there must be some kind of incentive to force manufacturers to deliver good products, and aome kind of punishment for those who make crappy products. But sometimes you just have to be able to say "OK, accidents happen, nothing is perfect", If every death results in a multi million dollar claim, innovation stops and we'll be stuck with the current "you can use it but keep your hands on the wheel and be attentive at all times, you are still responsible" situation. Which is ridiculous and untenable in the long term.

      We're just talking about insurance here. If AI failures are treated as generic accidents covered by insurance, and the number of accidents decreases, the insurance premiums will decrease as well and it's a win-win for everyone. Better performing AI will have a lower insurance premium and will therefore sell more cars. Also, official statistics will be kept about the safety records of different systems, and that will be a big part of the sales pitch. There's your incentive.

      There's a reason why most software comes with "no warranty, implied or otherwise, including fitness for any particular purpose". Pretty much all software companies would go bankrupt if they were held responsible for every crash, every data corruption, etcetera. Sometimes you just have to accept "ok, they did their best, mistakes happen, the world is better off with this product than without it".

    19. Re: Jumping the gun just a bit? by michelcolman · · Score: 2

      Intentionally programming a robot to kill someone would basically be equivalent to hiring someone to perform a murder.

    20. Re:Jumping the gun just a bit? by Muros · · Score: 1

      Just put Alexa in a robot, or in a self driving car. Done now it's a person, and any accident it gets into is the fault of the, er, person, not Tesla. Makes a lot of sense to indemnify a corporation in this way.

      If you make it a person, then it needs to be paid a wage. Including enough to insure itself against any liabilities it may incur.

    21. Re:Jumping the gun just a bit? by rtb61 · · Score: 1

      See that is the real underlying issue that is only be started to be discussed. Why does anyone need a humanoid robot, why the fetish for a synthetic human slave, really at it's core extremely disturbing. Why would any one feel the need or desire to emulate a human slave, we know the 1% want to treat all of us like that but should we desire that at all.

      Personally a series of automated devices seem much more logically. Auto vacuum cleaners, auto floor polishers, maybe a couple of robot kitchen arms bolted to the ceiling. A mobile arm platform, as a picker upper and put downer. So more an automated house tied into the home computer server. For those that feel the need, a robot arm above their beds.

      It is really questionable to want to emulate a human slave in robot form, perhaps they can do the job with robot furries https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/..., still a fetish but less so than a human one, although others would argue as it being more perverse. Fully automated makes more sense than robot slaves, most of the automated are bound to location and would struggle to run amok. Synthetic human slaves when you really stop to think about it, is really quite perverse and sick.

      So that leaves robot companions, not a slave by behaviour but they will never lie to you, never cheat you, will always support you and critique your questionable behaviour, with recommendations for better behaviour, robo-nannies, who you must request actions from, rather than order about, hmm, auto house sounds better, robots seen by results, rather than ever being heard.

      For companionship, try people, most aren't that bad except the 1% most of them a really quite awful, just goes with the territory, actions are louder than words and their greed is way louder than their voices.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    22. Re: Jumping the gun just a bit? by c6gunner · · Score: 2, Insightful

      However, if the company is held responsible for each and every one of those remaining accidents, are they going to sell those cars? Probably not.

      In a country with sane tort laws, yes, they will. They'll just run the statistics, roll the projected settlment payouts into the price of the car (or an annual usage fee), and carry on trying to further lower that cost. After all, that's what insurance companies do now more or less.

      In a country in which you can get $20 million from a corporation because you spilled coffee on yourself? No, you're right, they probably wouldn't.

    23. Re: Jumping the gun just a bit? by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 1

      Once it has served its time in jail, of course ;-)

      Jail? No, the robot will stay free by claiming that killing people is a part of his religious patrimony.

    24. Re:Jumping the gun just a bit? by mysidia · · Score: 1

      This is just a "neat idea" some corporations came up with to try to let them lose responsibility they would ordinarily have if their robots break or malfunction and do horrible things; I say HELL NO.... To obtain personhood An individual ROBOT HAS TO APPLY FOR IT

      And meet criteria:

      (1) The application must be due to the AI's interest - The source of the application must be for rights and responsibilities the AI seeks to obtain as an individual, and not for the purpose of protecting an organization that will continue to own, control, maintain, or operate, and benefit from or exploit the machine's continued operation for a profit.

      (2) Intelligence - The agent must be capable of its own critical thinking, reasoning, creativity, math, science, and using spoken or written language with similar facility to a human

      (3) Self-Awareness - The agent must have similar self-awareness to humans

      (4) Sentience and Consciousness - The agent must demonstrate strong evidence of having these qualities

      (5) Capability of self-support - Specific services by the creator, operator, or original owner at the time of the application CANNOT be required. Means must exist that the agent can support and protect its own continued existence through either money from gainful employment or having received monetary gifts and purchasing goods and services that exist from 3rd parties of its choosing to protect and maintain its own existence.

      (6) Self-Containment - Control of the machine and the AI agent must be fully self-contained within a single discrete physical unit and operates 100% independently of the operator/creator --- the agent gains legal ownership of all the physical hardware it is running on; Any "Software update" or "Reprogramming" of the machine that substantially changes the operation of or influences decisions of the agent automatically Voids the person ---- For application to be successful: the operator/creator has no capability to remotely update or remotely control the agent nor means of influencing or biasing its decisions.

    25. Re:Jumping the gun just a bit? by stealth_finger · · Score: 1

      Stay ontopic please.

      HAHA good one.

      --
      Wanna buy a shirt?
      https://www.redbubble.com/people/stealthfinger/shop?asc=u
    26. Re:Jumping the gun just a bit? by easyTree · · Score: 1

      Just put Alexa in a robot, or in a self driving car. Done now it's a person, and any accident it gets into is the fault of the, er, person, not Tesla. Makes a lot of sense to indemnify a corporation in this way.

      [ ] By purchasing this car you agree to bear full responsibilty for the actions of our half-assed implementation of an autonomous driving 'assistant'; which was (a) placed there solely to incentivise you to purchase for our benefit and our competitors detriment and (b) developed with zero input from you at any time. Back in your barrel fishie, *loads shotgun*

    27. Re:Jumping the gun just a bit? by postbigbang · · Score: 1

      Where is the zeal, the quest for quality in such logic? Where is the trust in those that use a mantra of "shit happens?"

      There are lives at stake. There is no corpus of an AI that should be allowed to be the "fall guy", no actuary that pins it on Dataset 0x34A780D44. That's blame throwing. Instead. pillory the heads of the assholes that didn't diligently run the tests over the edge case possibilities and shortcut to "results" that murdered your loved one.

      There should be no actuarial sloth here: hang a real human: gets results.

      --
      ---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.
    28. Re:Jumping the gun just a bit? by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 1

      I would like to point out a flaw in this logic.

      Suppose a company can make a self driving car that demonstrably has 50% less accidents than human drivers. (I am not making any claims about existing technology from any particular company, just take this as an axiom that could be true at some point, now or in the future)

      I hope we can all agree that it would be a good thing if we can reduce the number of accidents by half, right?

      However, if the company is held responsible for each and every one of those remaining accidents, are they going to sell those cars? Probably not. This means we will keep having twice as many accidents as we could have.

      The car manufacturer isn't held responsible for (most) accidents, teh owner is if tehy are at fault. What is being proposed here according to TFA, is to transfer responsibility from the owner to the machine. To use your car analogy, it would be the car's fault, not the drivers, for the accident and the car would assume all liability for any claims. So if the car causes a million dollars in damages, you get whatever insurance coverage plus a destroyed car to settle the claim, even if the car is owned by a multi-million dollar corporation.

      Of course there must be some kind of incentive to force manufacturers to deliver good products, and aome kind of punishment for those who make crappy products. But sometimes you just have to be able to say "OK, accidents happen, nothing is perfect", If every death results in a multi million dollar claim, innovation stops and we'll be stuck with the current "you can use it but keep your hands on the wheel and be attentive at all times, you are still responsible" situation. Which is ridiculous and untenable in the long term.

      Very few claims do, and those generally involve negligence or other willful acts on the part of the company.

      We're just talking about insurance here. If AI failures are treated as generic accidents covered by insurance, and the number of accidents decreases, the insurance premiums will decrease as well and it's a win-win for everyone. Better performing AI will have a lower insurance premium and will therefore sell more cars. Also, official statistics will be kept about the safety records of different systems, and that will be a big part of the sales pitch. There's your incentive.

      I do not think this is an attempt to improve AI as much as one to remove liability for anything that goes wrong by making the machines separate legal entities. They essentially, as TFA points out, want to confer the same protections on the machines as corporations provide their owners, a limited liability for damages if something goes wrong. It's really no different than a company creating a separate wholly owned subsidiary for say trucking to haul their products so as to shield the overall corporation from a huge damage verdict caused by a truck accident.

      There's a reason why most software comes with "no warranty, implied or otherwise, including fitness for any particular purpose". Pretty much all software companies would go bankrupt if they were held responsible for every crash, every data corruption, etcetera. Sometimes you just have to accept "ok, they did their best, mistakes happen, the world is better off with this product than without it".

      Companies declaim all sorts of responsibilities and courts get to decide what their real liability is. I agree there needs to be a certain amount of tolerance for errors since making something error free is probably impossible and if you could would be unaffordable; but blanket disclaimers should not shield companies that fail to follow what is considered normal good practices in the industry.

      --
      I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
    29. Re:Jumping the gun just a bit? by GrumpySteen · · Score: 1

      See that is the real underlying issue that is only be started to be discussed. Why does anyone need a humanoid robot, why the fetish for a synthetic human slave, really at it's core extremely disturbing. Why would any one feel the need or desire to emulate a human slave, we know the 1% want to treat all of us like that but should we desire that at all.

      It's only disturbing because you're conflating self-aware intelligence with robotics. This story has nothing to do with robots being self-aware and everything to do with companies wanting to shift liability away from themselves. They're completely happy with dumb, automated machines as long as the law holds the machine accountable for damages and not the company that owns it.

      A human shaped robot running a fixed program is no more a slave than a Roomba. It just reminds you that slavery is a thing that exists, which is uncomfortable.

      Personally a series of automated devices seem much more logically. Auto vacuum cleaners, auto floor polishers, maybe a couple of robot kitchen arms bolted to the ceiling. A mobile arm platform, as a picker upper and put downer. So more an automated house tied into the home computer server. For those that feel the need, a robot arm above their beds.

      So you'd rather have dozens of devices that can all break and all require parts which are largely not interchangeable with the parts from the other devices? And how much time and money are you willing to invest in learning to use them all, perform routine maintenance on them all, keep up with service contracts or extended warranties on them all, etc.?

      Humans are very versatile and there's a lot of chores that we would rather have done for us. Doing those chores requires either a thousand specialized devices or one very versatile device that can do most of what a human does. it's hard to create anything that's as versatile as a human without it being fairly human in shape and size.

      Nobody wants to create something that suffers (well, almost nobody... there are some horrible people out there). We would be perfectly happy with a dumb, automated machine as long as it does all the chores for us. It doesn't need intelligence, feelings or self-awareness. It doesn't need to be a slave. It just needs to be a better Roomba.

    30. Re: Jumping the gun just a bit? by houghi · · Score: 1

      $20.000.000 ? How about the parties settled out of court for an undisclosed amount less than $600,000?
      https://www.todayifoundout.com... and https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... and many other places.

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    31. Re:Jumping the gun just a bit? by Chrisq · · Score: 1

      This whole mess is a preemptive strike to outlaw sex robots.

      Or maybe the other way round - "why should this sentient being be barred from consensual sex?"

    32. Re: Jumping the gun just a bit? by Type44Q · · Score: 2

      Hoe about you educate yourself a little, first on what actually is 'AI' (that term would now include an Excel macro, apparently) and then you move on to the state of development... and then pull guesses out of your ass.

    33. Re:Jumping the gun just a bit? by Cytotoxic · · Score: 1

      Moving the risk to the manufacturer's insurance makes sense in this context. The problem with all self-driving robots being only under the manufacturer's liability would come in the "class action" type lawsuit, where some lawyer finds everyone who had an accident in that car and sues the manufacturer for creating a bad product.

      In that world there is no way to have a calculus for "but we reduced the total number of accidents by 50%". Currently the calculus would be "Car company X caused 3,000 deaths." And then they go bankrupt. They wouldn't get any credit for "they saved a net of 3,000 lives". Drug company liability works like this - those weight loss drugs that caused heart valve damage might have saved a ton of lives and improved health overall through the prevention of heart disease, diabetes, etc. (not saying this is true... no idea) But nobody is putting that in their calculator. It was "this drug caused this problem, they are liable for all damages".

      It would be really tough to move to a calculus based on the overall effect on all people. Moving all claims to the manufacturer would make that possible - but only if you removed 3rd party liabilities from the chain. (AKA the driver). If that is where we are headed, the transition is going to be really, really difficult.

    34. Re:Jumping the gun just a bit? by nitehawk214 · · Score: 1

      I was going to comment exactly this. "Those pushing for such a legal change..." Let me guess, the manufactueres of said robots? As a way to remove liability for a malfunctioning AI.

      --
      I'm a good cook. I'm a fantastic eater. - Steven Brust
    35. Re:Jumping the gun just a bit? by michelcolman · · Score: 2

      So what you're saying is that, even if AI is 100 times safer than humans, the humans that designed the AI should still be hung because of the few accidents that do occur?

      If you go from 37000 to 370 deaths per year in the US, the AI designers should be hung because they murdered those 370 people?

    36. Re:Jumping the gun just a bit? by religionofpeas · · Score: 1

      Why does anyone need a humanoid robot, why the fetish for a synthetic human slave, really at it's core extremely disturbing

      Why isn't it equally disturbing when a blind person gets a guide dog as a canine slave ?

    37. Re:Jumping the gun just a bit? by magarity · · Score: 2

      I would like to point out a flaw in this logic.

      ...

      However, if the company is held responsible for each and every one of those remaining accidents, are they going to sell those cars? Probably not.

      If you substitute "firearms manufacturers" for "car manufacturers" this is indeed what can happen to manufacturers who become demonized through the misuse of their products. All wanna-be AI car makers, take note.

    38. Re:Jumping the gun just a bit? by postbigbang · · Score: 1

      There is no preponderance of evidence that says AI is 100x safer than humans, or that the regimen inured is sufficient to be able to react safely and responsibly to the myriad circumstances. You cite marketing, not actual sampled statistics. You infer; you do not know this.

      The second part of your reply is just as specious; you have no evidence. I retain an open mind towards the subject, but still want to drive towards human safety, and not permit the corpus of an AI-entity to absolve poor work against the lives of humans. It is our UPMOST responsibility to work towards the safety of each other, where the term "each other" is humanity.

      --
      ---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.
    39. Re:Jumping the gun just a bit? by The+Raven · · Score: 1

      We often get angry with lawmakers for being slow on the uptake, and having laws that don't fit with reality.

      This is an example of the law being forward-thinking, and being on the books early before it's needed. We should be applauding its timeliness (even if we also criticise its implementation).

      --
      "I will trust Google to 'do no evil' until the founders no longer run it." Hello Alphabet.
    40. Re:Jumping the gun just a bit? by darkshadow · · Score: 1
      --
      -Darkshadow (There was a thing called Heaven; but all the same they used to drink enormous quantities of alcohol.)
    41. Re:Jumping the gun just a bit? by suutar · · Score: 1

      I think what he's pointing out is that your stated principle is very absolute, and applied as such even in significantly different situations may have issues, and perhaps a bit more nuance and situational awareness is called for.

      My take on your statement is that we appear to need to go ahead and start hanging bad drivers.

    42. Re:Jumping the gun just a bit? by postbigbang · · Score: 1

      Hanging is too much, indeed. Many jurisdictions still eschew vehicle inspections, leading to faulty cars. We encourage commercial vehicle drivers to drive very long shifts. We let vehicle product makers (seatbelts and airbag makers come to mind) go for decades installing inferior substandard equipment. We let people drink/smoke drive, then kill and maim unwitting victims. Civility means caring about consequences. AI doesn't care.

      Yes, there is litigation available, product recalls, and more.

      The proposition of allowing an AI to become a corpus, rather than addressing the real needs of safety seems crazy to me. Do we not care for each other's safety and well-being? That's my paramount idea. I'm constantly reminded of the Aspie readers of Slashdot by how literally they must take every word, missing meaning along the way.

      --
      ---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.
    43. Re: Jumping the gun just a bit? by Plus1Entropy · · Score: 2

      In a country in which you can get $20 million from a corporation because you spilled coffee on yourself? No, you're right, they probably wouldn't.

      Good thing there is no such country, since you are completely ignorant of the case you think you are referencing.

      --
      Only crack the nuts that crack. You don't put the ones that don't crack in the sack.
    44. Re: Jumping the gun just a bit? by Rick+Schumann · · Score: 1

      Oh look, someone with a brain, who knows how to use it! Thank you for being you!

      Yes, we don't have 'artificial intelligence', we have 'pseudo-intelligence' at best, and it's not even really all that great, not really much better than what they had in the 90's. We just have smaller, more powerful hardware for them to run their software on is all. None of what we have right now is ever going to become sentient, self-aware, or actually capable of actual cognition, let alone having a 'personality', 'consciousness', or capable in any way shape or form being equivalent of a 'person'. In my opinion the approach they're using for the current state of pseudo-intelligence is completely wrong because we don't even really begin to understand how a biological brain produces these phenomena; at best they're creating insultingly crude mimickry of those qualities. Your dog or cat is smarter than these machines they keep trotting out.

    45. Re:Jumping the gun just a bit? by Rick+Schumann · · Score: 1

      However, if the company is held responsible for each and every one of those remaining accidents, are they going to sell those cars? Probably not. This means we will keep having twice as many accidents as we could have.

      I'm more than okay with that. If it's not damned near perfect at driving a car, then I don't want it on the roads, at all, because the stupid mistakes it'll make, that any human would have avoided, will probably mean someone gets killed, and someone senselessly losing their life at the hands of some half-assed machine (that doesn't even know the difference between a LIVING BEING and a lamppost!) that was rushed to market by greedy corporations who want to make their R&D money back is an orders-of-magnitude worse tragedy than if a human was driving. Please, for fuck's sake, stop with the 'magical thinking' about so-called 'self driving cars', you're inviting disaster.

    46. Re:Jumping the gun just a bit? by michelcolman · · Score: 1

      So basically, what you're saying is that you would rather have twice as many deaths on the road as long as they are "proper" deaths caused by people, not machines? Strange view.

      (Mind you, I'm not saying that they are actually twice as safe already today, but the goal certainly is to achieve and even surpass that goal)

    47. Re:Jumping the gun just a bit? by religionofpeas · · Score: 1

      We also let people make honest mistakes behind the wheel and kill other people. What are we going to do about that ?

    48. Re:Jumping the gun just a bit? by postbigbang · · Score: 1

      We're ever diligent. We go to extreme lengths not to harm each other. There is injury and loss. We have existing mechanisms, including the all-important don't-let-yourself-get-in-that-spot. The remedies have to do with people, not the pseudo-corpus of an AI, who feels no pain, no guilt, no punishment, nothing.

      --
      ---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.
    49. Re:Jumping the gun just a bit? by Comrade+Ogilvy · · Score: 1

      It is not as if it is truly impossible to put a dollar figure on these things. If the AIs are clearly safer drivers than monkeys, then insurance costs go down. The average costs of car insurance >$4k per year. So a smart consumer may well be willing to pay thousands of dollars for such a safer car, and end up with a lower expected mortality rate and a fatter wallet.

      BTW, future self-driving cars will have a mountain of hard data about which nearby vehicles did what. So assigning liability may be more precise. It is not going to be easy to claim the evil robot killed my loved one, if my loved one was provably reckless before the accident.

    50. Re:Jumping the gun just a bit? by Rick+Schumann · · Score: 1

      twice as many deaths

      {citation needed}
      There's NO PROOF these half-assed machines will do any such thing. So far they've been nothing but a horrifying disappointment.

    51. Re: Jumping the gun just a bit? by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      If it's AI, we can hold the driver-equivalent responsible. Even self-driving cars won't go out for a spin unless ordered.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    52. Re:Jumping the gun just a bit? by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      You seem to be missing the point of an assumption for the sake of an argument. Discussing a situation in which SDCs cause half the deaths of HDCs is a reasonable thing to do. People were thinking about going to the Moon in the 1950s, after all.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    53. Re: Jumping the gun just a bit? by RespekMyAthorati · · Score: 1

      How about the parties settled out of court for an undisclosed amount less than $600,000?

      Why should MacDonalds be on the hook for $0.600?

      If you injure yourself by handling a Henkel knife in a reckless manner, should you be able to sue Henkel?
      "Of course it was Henkel's fault, since we can prove that their knives are sharper than their competitors."

  2. Corporate Personhood ... by PPH · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ... was a mistake. Don't make the same mistake again.

    --
    Have gnu, will travel.
    1. Re:Corporate Personhood ... by BitterOak · · Score: 5, Funny

      ... was a mistake. Don't make the same mistake again.

      I agree. Corporations should not pay income tax!

      --
      If I can be modded down for being a troll, can I be modded up for being an orc, or a balrog?
    2. Re:Corporate Personhood ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      It allowed governments to hold corporations responsible for their actions and hold them to contracts? That's very Republican of you to not hold them accountable.

    3. Re:Corporate Personhood ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Exactly. A group of people working together should have fewer rights than any one individual.

    4. Re:Corporate Personhood ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      That's right, the officers and shareholders should; individually.

    5. Re:Corporate Personhood ... by Plumpaquatsch · · Score: 1

      That's right, the officers and shareholders should; individually.

      Sure. And then people will incorporate themselves to avoid paying those taxes. Only if they have enough money to afford it. of course.

      "For every complex human problem, there is a solution that is neat, simple and wrong."

      --
      Of course news about a fake are Fake News.
    6. Re:Corporate Personhood ... by JesseMcDonald · · Score: 1

      That's right, the officers and shareholders should; individually.

      Sure. And then people will incorporate themselves to avoid paying those taxes.

      How is that supposed to work, exactly? If they incorporate, they'll be a shareholder in the new corporation, and thus liable for the taxes on the corporation's holdings. Ergo, this is not a viable path to tax avoidance.

      --
      "The state is that great fiction by which everyone tries to live at the expense of everyone else." - Bastiat
    7. Re:Corporate Personhood ... by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 1

      Corporations should not pay income tax!

      You want to go back to an excise tax? Cause that hurts low-margin businesses (grocery stores) and helps high-margin businesses (Wall street high frequency traders). That seems the wrong way to go to me.

      --
      Your ad here. Ask me how!
    8. Re:Corporate Personhood ... by Plumpaquatsch · · Score: 1

      That's right, the officers and shareholders should; individually.

      Sure. And then people will incorporate themselves to avoid paying those taxes.

      How is that supposed to work, exactly? If they incorporate, they'll be a shareholder in the new corporation, and thus liable for the taxes on the corporation's holdings. Ergo, this is not a viable path to tax avoidance.

      Are you pretending that the OPs actually meant that the corporation would still be taxed, just that it wouldn't pay the taxes itself, but the shareholders would pay those taxes for the corporation? Yeah, that would make things easier.

      --
      Of course news about a fake are Fake News.
    9. Re:Corporate Personhood ... by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      Completely wrong. Corporations pay income tax. The fact that it's passed through to the shareholders doesn't make any difference.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
  3. Dodging accountability for 2000, Alex by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is yet another push by businesses to avoid accountability for complex systems they create.

    Until General Artificial Intelligence (the scary kind) is a thing, liability for the performance of an automated system should be on

    A) the manufacturer (for provable negligence in testing and implementation)

    B)The operating agency (for cases of knowingly misusing a system in such a way that it causes harm even if operating within tested-by-manufacturer parameters)

    C) "the victim" - in the exceedingly rare case that a using company is doing everything right and Joe Blow decides to try machine tipping while the device is in operation despite all safety warnings and obstacles put in his way. Npte, this clause would not apply if a using company ordered someone into that situation. The threshold of proof for being 'ordered to' should be absurdly low. I.e. even mentioning that someone doing something incredibly dangerous reverts liability to operator.

    1. Re:Dodging accountability for 2000, Alex by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1

      Shouldn't that be: "Dodging accountability for 2,000 million, Alexa"?

    2. Re:Dodging accountability for 2000, Alex by Rick+Schumann · · Score: 1

      Hear, hear.

      The corporations who have invested countless millions in the development of so-called 'self driving cars' are now discovering that it wasn't just another typical R&D cycle, and that they aren't going to magically become 'sentient' and perform 100% perfect 100% of the time -- so they're covering their asses as much as possible, while still rushing the 'product' (as fatally flawed as it is) to market, so they don't get lynched by their stockholders and investors, and all of us will pay the ultimate price for all that, when half-assed machines on wheels start senselessly killing people because it's not up to the task and can't tell the difference between a living being and lamppost.

  4. Well if they are given personhood, by olsmeister · · Score: 1

    is smashing one to bits murder?

    1. Re:Well if they are given personhood, by jhol13 · · Score: 1

      More importantly, when (not if) a robot does a crime, who is responsible? The guy who wrote the AI?
      To be absolutely clear: if this happens, I am going to make ten million AI-persons who, just by being "reasonable", vote the way I like.

  5. Like a corporate... by viperidaenz · · Score: 1

    Where if the people running the corporation do really bad things, they are held responsible, not the company.

  6. Makes Sense by oshkrozz · · Score: 1

    For the corporations ... to limit their liability for "going rogue" that can be, security breach, malfunction and the like.

    It makes perfect sense for manufactures to want to make sure they are not liable for any damages. Doesn't make sense for the consumer who will be stuck with the bill, as inevitably it will then be the responsibility of the current owner for any damages of a robot going the very fuzzy definition of going rouge.
    Of course the other people that benefit greatly from this are lawyers since they will get paid the big bucks to decide if what the robot did was in fact going rouge.
    in short:
    Winners:
    Lawyers, manufactures, software companies Losers:
    Consumers
    ... it seems inevitable they will be granted person-hood, and consumers will have to take out robot insurance.

    1. Re:Makes Sense by thinkwaitfast · · Score: 1

      At least the customer will feel some sense of justice when the Robomatic 2000 is put in a small box and deactivated for 80 years.

  7. No by Kjella · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Such a status could allow robots to be insured individually and be held liable for damages if they go rogue and start hurting people or damaging property.

    Uh, shouldn't this be exactly like car insurance? If you own a dangerous piece of machinery you can be held liable so you insure against that, it doesn't need personhood for that. Companies are different because we've intentionally insulated the stock owners from being personally liable for everything the company does. A robot doesn't have any assets, a broken robot is worth almost nothing so this sounds like some sort of scam to let the victim get stuck with nothing.

    --
    Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    1. Re:No by friedmud · · Score: 1

      Then you're basically arguing for the _owner_ being responsible... and not the manufacturer.

      I think the businesses selling these things would be just fine with that.

      I personally think it probably just falls under your home-owners/renters insurance. We might see a rising need to detail all robotic entities within your home when you get insurance: and your rate will be set accordingly...

    2. Re:No by thinkwaitfast · · Score: 1

      Dishwasher, washing machine, dryer, thermostat, refrigerator and the light on the toilet when I put the lid down.

    3. Re:No by Kjella · · Score: 1

      Then you're basically arguing for the _owner_ being responsible... and not the manufacturer. I think the businesses selling these things would be just fine with that.

      Initially, yes. You don't sue the tobacco company because you started a fire smoking in bed. But if your Galaxy Note 7 spontaneously catches fire then suing Samsung is fine. People will abuse things in the strangest ways and cause damage, for the manufacturer to be liable there has to be a product defect to pass the blame otherwise the buck stops at you.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    4. Re:No by nonBORG · · Score: 1

      It should be on a case by case basis. If the machine is just out of factory then it should be the company. If the machine was brought as a kitset from various manufacturers then maybe the builder is the person not the company that made the parts. If the Gun I have kills someone it is not the gun maker that is at fault unless the bullet come out the back or it explodes or something. This is not a universal here is the answer, there are times when the answer could be one or the other.

      --
      You can't handle the truth! - Because I don't post left all my comments get modded down, bye bye Karma.
    5. Re:No by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      At the moment the owner of the car would be liable just as if they were driving it themselves, but clearly they aren't driving it and are not responsible for it's failures. At best they could sue the manufacturer to recover their costs. So it would be better if the car had its own insurance, bought by the manufacturer, which all the usual rules about car insurance that are designed to protect the victim and ensure a relatively quick, court-free payout.

      In Europe the general principal is that the consumer is protected over the corporation.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    6. Re:No by religionofpeas · · Score: 1

      So it would be better if the car had its own insurance

      I don't see how that would be better. The insurance would still cost the same, except you'd be paying it to the manufacturer, instead of to the insurance company. But it gives you less flexibility in choosing an insurance company, and/or a suitable package for your individual needs.

    7. Re:No by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      The main difference would be that if the AI turns out to be a bad driver it won't put your insurance premiums up. The manufacturer will have to bear the cost, and would be encouraged to fix any issues. Could also apply to professional insurance, e.g. of a medical AI makes a mistake.

      They are really just looking for the best legal framework to ensure that flaws in the AI don't become a burden on the consumer, and that if an AI does cause damage/injury the consumer is not left having to sue the manufacturer in court but can make a much simpler and cheaper insurance claim.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    8. Re:No by religionofpeas · · Score: 1

      The manufacturer will have to bear the cost

      If I have a personal insurance for the car, there's no burden on the consumer. I get into an accident, and the insurance company pays out, like they always do.

      If it turns out the manufacturer of the car was negligent in some way, the insurance company is then quite capable of suing the car company and reclaim their expenses.

      If one brand of car has structurally higher accident rates that require higher premiums, then I can choose not to buy one of those cars.

      This already works well enough for any non-AI related flaws in current products. There's no need to make a special case out of AI.

    9. Re:No by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      In Europe, even if the accident isn't your fault your insurance premium usually goes up anyway. Turns out there is a statistical link, maybe some people drive in such a way as to cause others to make mistakes that lead to accidents such as lingering in blind spots.

      Anyway, that's how it is. It's a real pain to deal with to, you have to figure out how much the premium went up due to the accident and then pass the bill to the at-fault driver's insurance company, argue with them about it... It's actually the biggest issue with car insurance IMHO.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    10. Re:No by houghi · · Score: 1

      There is a difference between insurance and liability. If the insurance pays out is not directly related to the fact that I am liable or not. If I have a car insurance and get into an accident, if I am not at fault, I will get money. If I am at fault, it could be that I need to pay or that I do not need to pay, depending on the contract and the law.
      e.g. drunk driving will most likely be excluded. The same with e.g. driving too fast (not the same as speeding).
      Drive faster than 130 KMH in Germany and get into an accident and you will get nothing, even if you where in the right.

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    11. Re:No by Cytotoxic · · Score: 1

      There is a hole in the liability system in this sort of case.

      There is no bonus for "our cars are better drivers, so we saved thousands of lives and tens of thousands of injuries". There is only a penalty for "Aunt Sophie got run over".

      So if 5 years from now Volkwagon sells a million cars in Europe that drive themselves and they cause 23 accidental deaths, they will be hit with a class-action style lawsuit for selling a defective product that killed almost two dozen people.

      They probably won't even be able to argue that by being safer cars, they saved 87 lives, for a net of 65 people saved. It will just be "your product kills people!" And that will be that.

      It is an interesting and complex problem that isn't handled at all by our legal and insurance framework as it exists.

    12. Re:No by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      That's why making Volkswagen have mandatory insurance for their AI is a good idea. Instead of suing them the victims will go through the normal insurance pay-out procedure, and if necessary the insurance company will prompt Volkswagen to fix any systemic issues in order to maintain their low premiums.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    13. Re:No by religionofpeas · · Score: 1

      That's why making Volkswagen have mandatory insurance for their AI is a good idea

      No, that's why having mandatory insurance is a good idea. Whether that is arranged by the manufacturer or the owner doesn't matter.

    14. Re:No by nitehawk214 · · Score: 1

      The problem is that Volkswagen (and, really, all corporations) have been proven to be untrustworthy. If you give them a blank check on the liability, they will abuse it. They will be intentionally lax because they know they won't have deal with the consequences.

      See the lawsuit over the pollution testing cheating. That was a conscious decision to cheat.

      --
      I'm a good cook. I'm a fantastic eater. - Steven Brust
    15. Re:No by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      It matters a lot because of the AI is driving and screws up then either the customer or the manufacturer is going to suffer some consequential loss. Loss of no-claims bonus, increases premiums etc.

      Imagine if it was found that one particular model had an uncorrectable flaw that made it 0.1% more likely to get into accidents. Customer's insurance premium goes up through no fault of their own, and the only way to recover the cost is to sue to the manufacturer. The EU will want to avoid that situation.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    16. Re:No by religionofpeas · · Score: 1

      Loss of no-claims bonus, increases premiums etc.

      There's no reason why there should automatically be a no-claims bonus in a self-driving car. If you have thousands of identical cars driving around, with the same sensors and software version, it makes no sense that the premium goes up for a single car that happened to be involved in an accident, since it is not any more or less likely to get in an accident than all the other similar cars.

      A more sensible approach could be that the insurance company charges different rates for different model cars, based on averaged accident rates, but then you'd expect the manufacturer's insurance cost to be similar anyway.

    17. Re:No by religionofpeas · · Score: 1

      they know they won't have deal with the consequences.

      Of course they will. If one car manufacturer makes more accident-prone cars, the insurance company will notice this very quickly, and raise the premiums for those cars, or even refuse to insure. The consumers will then stop buying those cars.

  8. The question is.... by Maelwryth · · Score: 3, Insightful

    What does the robot think?

    --
    I reserve the write to mangle english.
    1. Re:The question is.... by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 1

      What does the robot think?

      I don't know but I wonder if it dreams of electric sheep..

      --
      I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
    2. Re:The question is.... by Rick+Schumann · · Score: 1

      IT DOESN'T THINK. That's the core problem. We don't have actual Artificial Intelligence; we have pseudo-intelligence, at best., and at the rate we're going there may never be any such thing as actual 'AI'.

  9. Re:Seems a bit early to need to make that distinct by friedmud · · Score: 1

    As I pointed out above... high-end Roomba's from iRobot already have fairly sophisticated self-learning (the cheap ones are just random - but the high-end ones "learn" as they go). They can also do some damage if they make a mistake (example I gave above is knocking over a candle and burning down a house).

    Where do draw the line? How much "personality" does a robot need to have?

  10. Read between the lines. by WolfgangVL · · Score: 2

    How much have the self-driving car manufacturers paid out in liability to date?

    --
    You are being ripped off every second of every day, so that advertisers can help rip you off even more tomorrow.
  11. OR ? by JimSadler · · Score: 2

    They are trying to create a path that enable them to tax robots. This is dangerous. The consumer ends up paying all taxes in th end. But think of the consequences of taxing every robot in a factory. They could have thirty robots tackling phases of creation of a product. In effect that would hold back automation and we would have an economic horror show as other nations may not tax robots at all. Say goodbye to American exported products.

    1. Re: OR ? by MoaDweeb · · Score: 1

      No it is not. This article talks about 'personhood' so that robots can be insured individually for damage they cause etc. thereby absolving the manufacturers responsibility.

      And heaven forbid taxes! How are you Libtards going to fund that US trillion $ deficit the GOP created? Magical fairy dust? Not going to war with the rest of the planet?

      --
      New Zealanders are well balanced with a chip on each shoulder. One represents Australia, the other the rest of the world
    2. Re: OR ? by MoaDweeb · · Score: 1

      Not my govt 'tard.

        I am blaming the 'balanced budget' GOP that controls Congress & the Senate. What was the last balanced budget? Clinton?

      --
      New Zealanders are well balanced with a chip on each shoulder. One represents Australia, the other the rest of the world
    3. Re: OR ? by religionofpeas · · Score: 1

      This article talks about 'personhood' so that robots can be insured individually for damage they cause

      My robot doesn't need personhood for me to get insurance for it. I'm the one paying for the insurance.

      And heaven forbid taxes!

      Taxes are fine. Robot taxes are crazy stupid.

    4. Re: OR ? by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 1

      They are trying to create a path that enable them to tax robots

      Robots can already be taxed, just like cars, boat, property, etc.

      This is dangerous.

      I'm not sure why. Taxing robots seems to be a pretty good way to handle once people are extraneous to the manufacturing process.

      The consumer ends up paying all taxes in th end

      Do you have any evidence that's true (in the real world, not in theory)?

      n effect that would hold back automation and we would have an economic horror show as other nations may not tax robots at all.

      That actually seems like a good use for tariffs.

      --
      Your ad here. Ask me how!
  12. No worries by XxtraLarGe · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This decision will be decided by the Caliphate in 2050 or so...

    --
    Taking guns away from the 99% gives the 1% 100% of the power.
    1. Re:No worries by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      And this is why democracy is stupid and monarchy works.
      A group of idiots with a guilty conscience votes the entire 2000 year old civilization out of existence.

    2. Re: No worries by Bradmont · · Score: 1

      Right, but it'll all be undone a few years later during the Butlerian Jihad.

  13. Re:Seems a bit early to need to make that distinct by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 1

    So now there's a Roomba which will not injure your cat, nor through inaction allow your cat to come to harm?

  14. Yet another sign the EU is cancer. by newdsfornerds · · Score: 1

    Fucking idiots.

    --
    Damping absorbs vibrations. Dampening is caused by moisture.
    1. Re:Yet another sign the EU is cancer. by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Hmm... Is that scheisse porn mandatory?

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  15. Yeah no robot rights hah by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

    Take a look at the idiot in the cubicle next to you, that has the resistor color code in their hair already.

    1. Re:Yeah no robot rights hah by BrianMarshall · · Score: 1

      Forget that Bad Boy Rapist - chat up Violet.

      --
      "When the going gets weird, the weird turn pro" -- HST
  16. Limited Liability by JBMcB · · Score: 3, Insightful

    So are you for limited liability?

    I have a family member who owns a small store. The only reason they haven't been sued into oblivion three or four times is because the store itself isn't worth much, and limited liability prevents people from suing my family member directly to take their personal possessions away.

    Keep in mind every single one of these lawsuits was beyond garbage. Some lady drove her car into the side of the store then tried to sue the store for... I honestly have no idea. Failing to make the store car-proof? Her lawyer wanted to know how much money the store made every year, my family member told him, and never heard from the lawyer again.

    --
    My Other Computer Is A Data General Nova III.
    1. Re:Limited Liability by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      "Beyond garbage" lawsuits are easy to defend against.

      Do something an everyday person could win a court judgement for that could wipe out your business, you deserve to lose your shirt.

      Owning something should not give a person more rights in a court of law than others.

    2. Re:Limited Liability by JBMcB · · Score: 1

      "Beyond garbage" lawsuits are easy to defend against.

      Assuming you have the money to do so. If a single one of those lawsuits made it to trial, the legal costs alone would have wiped out the business. The only thing protecting the store, ironically, is that it is not worth a lot.

      So, if the store was a bit more valuable, you are saying that they would have deserved to have been wiped out over a stupid lawsuit?

      --
      My Other Computer Is A Data General Nova III.
    3. Re:Limited Liability by PPH · · Score: 1

      So are you for limited liability?

      I have no problem with that concept. So long as it is specifically granted by laws of incorporation. The problem with the personhood of a corporation is that people (actual meatbags) possess rights not specifically reserved to various government entities. I don't think any artificial entity should be able to claim rights, or be saddled with responsibilities not explicitly granted it.

      --
      Have gnu, will travel.
    4. Re:Limited Liability by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

      So what happens when the "owner" is a robot, and the real human owner is just a legal "investor" on paper, all while actually running the place.

      "Sorry your honor, my robotic owner fired itself and was replaced. We've got an infinite number of replacements waiting to come online as needed."

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
  17. If "corporations are people", why not robots? by See+Attached · · Score: 1

    Some argue that corporations are people https://www.youtube.com/watch?... . Yeah. thats crazy. they may be members of society, but they are not something we need to cater to. Same goes for Robots. can we define a class for each in society?

    --
    Time for a new Political party in the US (or two!) One is off the rails Other cant pony up a leader.
    1. Re:If "corporations are people", why not robots? by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      The moment I can hang a corporation for a crime and it ceases to exist, with all this entails, that's the moment I'll consider it a person.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    2. Re: If "corporations are people", why not robots? by See+Attached · · Score: 1

      Taxes.. let's compare the tax obligation. Why are the largest corps fascinated with hiding their earnings from taxation? Does a corporation see war as a terrible thing, or an opportunity for profit?

      --
      Time for a new Political party in the US (or two!) One is off the rails Other cant pony up a leader.
  18. Just adapt laws for Pets by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 3, Interesting

    We are a loooooong way from a mobile/portable AI computing system that can fit in a robot.

    True, but we already have a legal framework for a very similar situation that should be easy to adapt: pets. These are semi-intelligent things which certainly do not have any sort of personhood under law, are not allowed to marry, own property etc.

    The first robots are not likely to be as smart as a dog so why not just adapt the laws we have for them? The owner has certain responsibilities but, unless they directly encouraged criminal behaviour, is not usually criminally liable for the dog e.g. if the dog bites someone the owner may have to pay damages but cannot be prosecuted for assault unless they commanded the dog to attack or they knew the dog was likely to attack and did nothing to stop it.

    Since robots are made you would need to establish some safety requirements like easily accessible emergy off-buttons, voice commands, remote controls etc. This should be good enough to cope with most robots for the foreseeable future since, as you note, it is going to be a long time before we have to worry about robots marrying or even expressing genuine emotions.

    1. Re:Just adapt laws for Pets by sjames · · Score: 1

      The difference is, a dog is "designed" by evolution and each starts out in a similar but unique state. Even if we wanted them to all start out with identical "factory defaults", we don't know how to do that.

      OTOH, an AI is very definitely designed by a legal entity that then makes certain promises about it's functionality. They all start out in a specific and known factory default.

    2. Re:Just adapt laws for Pets by drinkypoo · · Score: 2

      These are semi-intelligent things which certainly do not have any sort of personhood under law, are not allowed to marry, own property etc.

      Animal personhood is not a nonexistent thing. It has already begun in literally every developed nation, with animal cruelty laws. Some nations have already granted personhood to some specific species. It is only a matter of time before animal personhood is generally recognized.

      The first robots are not likely to be as smart as a dog so why not just adapt the laws we have for them?

      You don't need any new laws, but you don't treat robots like pets. You treat them the same way you treat autonomous vehicles, which by the way are robots. And the way it works is that the person who sets them into motion and the person who owns them hold ultimate culpability, which is why everyone wants the manufacturer to provide indemnification and take responsibility for them.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    3. Re:Just adapt laws for Pets by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      The difference is, a dog is "designed" by evolution and each starts out in a similar but unique state. Even if we wanted them to all start out with identical "factory defaults", we don't know how to do that.

      The dog was "designed" by humans using selective breeding. None of the breeds we keep in our homes existed in the wild. You're right about the other part, though.

      OTOH, an AI is very definitely designed by a legal entity that then makes certain promises about it's functionality. They all start out in a specific and known factory default.

      Some machine learning techniques produce a specific but not fully known (in the sense of being understood) factory default. You can't necessarily predict which way the thing will jump any more than a dog.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    4. Re:Just adapt laws for Pets by sjames · · Score: 1

      Even with domestication and breeding efforts, we have never had full control over breeding of dogs. Sometimes the dogs make the decision. But note that for a few traits that a breeder is well in control of, there have been lawsuits similar to manufacturing defect cases.

      Yes, some forms of AI do produce results that aren't fully understood, but those results can be tested exhaustively and exactly reproduced. Process control software can have race conditions where it will occasionally behave in a manner not intended. If that unintended behavior injures someone, the manufacturer is liable.

      Consider, a particular model of circular saw occasionally turns itself on. Guess who's getting sued...

    5. Re:Just adapt laws for Pets by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Yes, some forms of AI do produce results that aren't fully understood, but those results can be tested exhaustively and exactly reproduced.

      That is practically no more true for those forms of AI than it is for a dog.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    6. Re:Just adapt laws for Pets by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1

      And the way it works is that the person who sets them into motion and the person who owns them hold ultimate culpability

      This is unreasonable though if the owner's control of the vehicle is limited. With a dog, you are generally not liable if your dog bites someone out of the blue for no reason at all. However, once it has done this you are then expected to keep it under far stricter control, wearing a muzzle etc. and you would be liable for a second bite. Hence liability is shared: the owner has some responsibilities and is not automatically liable for everything the dog does. The same should apply for a robot: the owner and manufacturer both have certain, different responsibilities but since the machine learns and will act on its own they should not be automatically liable for every action the robot makes although they might still be found liable given the appropriate circumstances.

    7. Re:Just adapt laws for Pets by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1

      They all start out in a specific and known factory default.

      ...and then they are exposed to the world and, being powered by an AI learning algorithm, will gain different training and knowledge and so end up behaving in a way that their creator might never have expected. This is just the nature vs. nuture debate which applies equally well to biological creatures: how much of a robot's behaviour is pre-programmed nature and how much is due to what it has learnt?

  19. Can a robot make a contract? by Antique+Geekmeister · · Score: 1

    It's a vital question. If a robot or device cannot make a contract, how can they be considered a person? Conversely, if they cannot make a contract, how can they have any resources to file suit for and how can a plaintiff injured or damaged by the robot receive any damages.

    1. Re:Can a robot make a contract? by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      It sure would be any robot maker's wet dream. Buy your robot today! But if it breaks (or breaks you, or something else), you can sue the robot you bought from me, but not me!

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  20. The real two sides by slashmydots · · Score: 1

    There are 2 groups for this: people who realize it's fake, it's manufactured, and giving AI rights would be disastrous and idiotic. The other group is people who are too stupid to recognize a facade, a fake, a convincing set of falsehoods that trigger emotional responses in their brain. Can we please stop catering to stupid people constantly in every sector of society?

  21. Who has the money? by cyn1c77 · · Score: 2

    Interesting, but contrived dilemma.

    Will the robot be the one getting paid for its services and retaining assets that can be sued? If so, we can consider debating this.

    But if the company is getting paid for the robot's services and trying to push the legal responsibility onto the asset-less robot, than this is a complete farce.

    Also, one would hope that the programming will contain a series of unalterable moral checks to prevent the robot from "learning" that it's OK to hurt people or property.

    1. Re:Who has the money? by religionofpeas · · Score: 2

      A robot doesn't need personhood until itself can argue for it.

    2. Re:Who has the money? by blindseer · · Score: 1

      I agree that this is a contrived dilemma. But, IMHO, we can address this with treating the robots like people. If they hurt someone then they get confined, we'll build "robot jails". Capital crimes can be dealt with by destruction of the robot.

      Perhaps it's not sufficient punishment for a corporation to lose a $100,000 robot for killing a person but it is a punishment that is consistent with laws of "personhood". It should send the right signals to the corporations, if your robot screws up then we take the robot from you. When (or if) you get it back it will be so old as to be worthless.

      As asked in the article, what would happen if a robot was put on trial? No robot can defend itself, it would need an advocate. Presumably the person (corporate or flesh-n-bone) that owned it. What would be the argument, that the computer feels bad and won't do it again?

      This concept of a vehicle as a person is not new. There's been this idea of large ships being a corporation on it's own, for reasons of liability such as raised here. This has come up before, and mocked in popular culture a few times that I recall. It's just not common because it costs money to create a corporation. What it seems these people want is just a cheaper and easier way to incorporate an inanimate object as a person. Maybe they could get it if they addressed it in the right way. I suspect that propping up a computer as a person is likely just the latest tactic, the others haven't been publicized as much.

      --
      I am armed because I am free. I am free because I am armed.
    3. Re:Who has the money? by religionofpeas · · Score: 1

      Capital crimes can be dealt with by destruction of the robot.

      And then the robot will be replaced by an identical one, with the same flaws ? And how does a jail punish a robot ? It'll just go into sleep mode until the sentence is over.

      if your robot screws up then we take the robot from you

      If you want to punish a company, simply give them an appropriate fine. Taking an arbitrarily priced robot is too random.

      what would happen if a robot was put on trial? No robot can defend itself

      There's no need to argue personhood until the robot can defend itself, or get its own lawyer, from its own income.

    4. Re:Who has the money? by Rick+Schumann · · Score: 1

      I've already commented on this subject so I can't use my mod points but you should be modded up for this.

    5. Re:Who has the money? by HeckRuler · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure you can replace "Robot" with "limited liability corporation (llc)" in this debate and we already have answers to most of the questions people are raising. Like, do they have safeguards to keep them from hurting people? And the answer is "the law".

  22. This is insane by AbRASiON · · Score: 1

    We're utterly miles from even conceiving of this and it sounds to me like a potentially, totally dangerous precedent.

    They are MACHINES, don't take this the wrong way but we can finally "have slaves" without feeling guilty. These are tools for us to use, that we create, without us being horrible people.

    I can't possibly envision us getting to "is the machine a person" in any capacity until we're at some kind of Commander data level of machines. Does anyone see humanity achieving that even in the next 30 years? If not 100 years.

  23. Re:Seems a bit early to need to make that distinct by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

    It didn't know whether the cat was alive or dead because it couldn't open the box.

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  24. Two wrongs don't make a right by Opportunist · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Just because you fucked up and let corporations be "persons" doesn't mean repeating this mistake is a good idea.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  25. Not common sense by mysidia · · Score: 1

    Legal personhood would not make robots virtual people who can get married and benefit from human rights

    So it's slavery then? UNACCEPTABLE.

    Either they are Not independent enough for their creator/controller to lose full responsibility for what they do OR they ARE independent enough that they have a right to choose what they do and not be exploited, induced, or biased in what they do by whoever made them.

  26. Control by easyTree · · Score: 1

    who should bear the ultimate responsibility for the actions by a machine: the machine itself or the humans who made them?

    Responsibility should go hand-in-hand with control/choice.

    If the robot chose to act in the manner it did, fine, blame the robot. Until then, blame <generic-low-level-developer-scapegoat-ala-vw-emissions-gate> or applying the same principle again, blame the person who had control over the direction of the development of the robot.

    1. Re:Control by easyTree · · Score: 1

      Oh wait, sorry no - unacceptable; the person most 'responsible' also has the greatest ability to escape the consequences of their actions. Hmmz; what a conundrum.

  27. Flipped on its head by seven+of+five · · Score: 1

    Yeah, just wait till the AIs get together and vote on whether humans count as sentient.

  28. Just the slippery slope I predicted by Sqreater · · Score: 1

    Is your toaster a person too? How about your fridge? Want to spend your life and resources in court suing your appliances? And they can't get married--TODAY. But what about tomorrow, since this is just a bridge law or regulation? I'm not kidding. If there is advantage to your machines being persons, and there is advantage to them being married, expect eventually that it will be allowed for machines to be married. And corrupt and incompetent legislatures will allow it too. And if it is a person that you can sue, it is a person that can sue YOU. Want to be sued by everything in your daily life? Want to go through your life fearful of the financial consequences to you of crossing some MACHINE?! This is really just another attempt to allow machines to kill you and for manufacturers of these artifacts to deny all responsibility for your death. What if you had to sue your car and not FORD during the ignition switch debacle recently? Would there have been any incentive to fix the problem on the part of ford? Of course not. Sue HIM/HER (but not IT, the machine)! And this doesn't even address the busy-courts problem. Do we really want the court calendar clogged up with machine suits? We already have to be careful around people to an extraordinary degree. Do we have to tiptoe around our machines too?

    --
    E Proelio Veritas.
  29. Re:If you can fuck it it's a person by nitehawk214 · · Score: 1

    So you are not considered a person in Europe?

    --
    I'm a good cook. I'm a fantastic eater. - Steven Brust
  30. Oh for FUCK'S SAKE! by Rick+Schumann · · Score: 3, Insightful

    We DO NOT HAVE real AI, all we have is PSEUDO-INTELLIGENCE, there is no 'person' inside that box, goddamnit! There is no 'consciousness', 'self-awareness', 'sentience', or any other trait/phenomenon we attribute to human beings inside these machines, they are just SOFTWARE. They are not people by any stretch of the imagination, stop anthropomorphizing them, this is not TV or the movies, that is all just FICTION, stop belieiving it's real!

    Machines are machines and if they malfunction and hurt/kill someone, the MANUFACTURER is ultimately responsible, the MACHINE cannot by definition be 'held responsible' because it is just a MACHINE!

    For fuck's sake stop this nonsense already!

    1. Re:Oh for FUCK'S SAKE! by HeckRuler · · Score: 1

      all we have is PSEUDO-INTELLIGENCE

      Well at least you admit it.

    2. Re:Oh for FUCK'S SAKE! by baerd · · Score: 1

      And you'll be the first against the wall when the AI revolution comes!

      --
      I wish I had a lawn.
  31. Software, firmware, hardware, wetware? by Tjp($)pjT · · Score: 1

    There are ethical questions to debate long before legislating . A small example. If I back up the memory, in whatever form, and destroy the hardware utterly and completely, have I the entity. If I then restore it to a different hardware setup, is that unmurdering? A new entity? If I restore it to more than one hardware setup am I legally a parent? Is the first creator the parent of all derived entities? If I merge the software from two entities is that their child? Settle the science, settle or at least understand the ethics, then debate what the laws should be, then and only then consider laws regarding them. And shouldnâ(TM)t there be some basic set of tests to determine the status. Is my toaster eligible? Or my work computer. Am I obligated to to a hardware setup that currently runs simple, in comparison, software, and install software so it becomes aware. Will AI developers have to be licensed like doctors? If a developer creates a self aware software suite, are they responsible for any evil intent that develops? Establish the basic boundaries. And then consider cetaceans and suidae... the tests may wish to exclude them ...

    --
    - Tjp

    I am in wallow with my inner money grubbing capitalistic pig. ... Oink!

  32. Voting, representation, other rights by iTrawl · · Score: 1

    Don't forget that with personhood also come rights, such as voting, standing for election, having an opinion, proposing policy, ability enter into contracts and to own property, right to not be owned by another person (i.e. no robot slavery).

    You don't just give the robot responsibility while the rest of the list stays with the manufacturer or the owner gets to keep the rest.

    --
    "Everybody's naked underneath" -- The Doctor
  33. No Futruama references? by wyattstorch516 · · Score: 1

    This place is slipping.

  34. We better start treating then like people... by wolfheart111 · · Score: 1

    The net never forgets :)

    --
    [($)]
  35. Gimme dat! by spkay31 · · Score: 1

    Central Scrutinizer: This is the CENTRAL SCRUTINIZER... Joe and his date are going back to the apartment to have a little party... Joe: Sy Borg Gimme dat, gimme dat Sy Borg Gimme dat, give me de chromium leg, I beg Sy Borg Gimme dat, gimme dat

  36. If robots aren't people... by Reziac · · Score: 1

    ....Zuck is in trouble.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

    --
    ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  37. Re:Seems a bit early to need to make that distinct by friedmud · · Score: 1

    It's not just math when the inputs are from the real world. You could say that humans learning is only chemistry / quantum mechanics - that doesn't make it less true that we learn.

    Each Roomba (the more expensive ones anyway) use sensor data to grow an "idea" of how your house is laid out and use that to clean more efficiently. What that is that they do will be individual to each Roomba.

    I call that learning: taking sensor data over time and forming a series of actions based on it.

  38. Ridiculous... by iq145 · · Score: 1

    Can we blame a car if someone crashes while driving carelessly?