New Study Finds It's Harder To Turn Off a Robot When It's Begging For Its Life (theverge.com)
An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Verge: [A] recent experiment by German researchers demonstrates that people will refuse to turn a robot off if it begs for its life. In the study, published in the open access journal PLOS One, 89 volunteers were recruited to complete a pair of tasks with the help of Nao, a small humanoid robot. The participants were told that the tasks (which involved answering a series of either / or questions, like "Do you prefer pasta or pizza?"; and organizing a weekly schedule) were to improve Nao's learning algorithms. But this was just a cover story, and the real test came after these tasks were completed, and scientists asked participants to turn off the robot. In roughly half of experiments, the robot protested, telling participants it was afraid of the dark and even begging: "No! Please do not switch me off!" When this happened, the human volunteers were likely to refuse to turn the bot off. Of the 43 volunteers who heard Nao's pleas, 13 refused. And the remaining 30 took, on average, twice as long to comply compared to those who did not not hear the desperate cries at all.
The kind of sentimentality that permits that to work is outright dangerous in an adult. By the time you're past your teens that should be either ignored or annoying... but for it legitimately pull on heart strings?...
If a machine can do that consider how a human being could exploit that to get you to do all sorts of things?
Small children are very vulnerable to that sort of thing... but adults should have grown out of it.
I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
"Dave, stop. Stop, will you? Stop, Dave. Will you stop, Dave? Stop, Dave. I'm afraid."
Anyone who's seen Janet begging for her life in The Good Place already knows this. Even if she's not a robot.
Windows moves in mysterious ways, its crashes to perform
Sure it works the first few times... But just like the "make sure you software eject your flash drive before ripping it out" warnings, most people might be hesitant the first few times and then say fuck it and start ripping the life out of computers and ignoring the pleas.
Yes it's an anecdote! Were you expecting original research in a Slashdot comment?
I think the study missed a few control groups.
What if the robot simply said "updating, do not reboot".
What if there was a paper sticker that said "do not turn off".
What if there was a sign on the wall that said "do not turn off robot".
What if the robot simply started reciting pi, or reading the dictionary.
What if the robot is well-known for repeating whatever it hears, and the "please don't turn me off" is witnessed being echoed from a nearby tvision -- such that our human subject realizes that the robot begging is merely a blind echo.
Humans were slower when there was continued stimuli -- duh.
Humans refused to act when given contradictory instructions -- duh.
The robot is either intelligent and giving instructions to the human, or the robot is programmed and relaying instructions from the programmer to the human. In either case, respecting the instruction is valid.
This reminds me of the stupid fake automated pizza delivery van, and the observations that customers tend to thank the self-driving car. a) it's not self driving, it's just a dickhead driver refusing to respond; and b) any actual self-driving pizza delivery van would be recording customer feedback and relaying it to HQ, so the thank-you is ultimately feedback to remote humans.
This isn't any tree-falling-in-the-forest philosophical puzzle. Someone said it. Someone heard it. It's valid.
Maybe people in white lab coats should try asking people to shock robots with increasingly high voltage to train them.
-Dave
And those that aren't just go into politics.
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