homebrew2ny
Senior member
- Jan 3, 2013
- 610
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Decades ago they kept telling us about robots helping us around the house like the jetsons, and all we got were fvcking roombas.
Eben Moglen said:There, of course, from the beginning, the assumption was that robots would be humanoid. And as it turns out, theyre not. We do after all live commensally with robots now, we do, just as they expected. But the robots we live with dont have hands and feet, they dont carry trays of drinks, and they dont push the vacuum cleaner. At the edge condition, they are the vacuum cleaner. But most of the time, were their hands and feet. We embody them. We carry them around with us. They see everything we see, they hear everything we hear, theyre constantly aware of our location, position, velocity, and intention. They mediate our searches, that is to say they know our plans, they consider our dreams, they understand our lives, they even take our questions like how do I send flowers to my girlfriend transmit them to a great big database in california, and return us answers offered by the helpful wizard behind the curtain.
Who of course is keeping track. These are our robots, and we have everything we ever expected to have from them, except the first law of robotics. You remember how that went right? Deep in the design of the positronic intelligence that made the robot were the laws that governed the ethical boundary between what could and could not be done with androids. The first law, the first law, the one that everything else had to be deduced from was that no robot may ever injure a human being. Robots must take orders from their human owners, except where those orders involve harming a human being. That was assumed to be the principal out of which at the root, down by the NAND gates of the artificial neurophysiology of robot brains, down there where the simplest idea is, you remember for Descartes, it was cogito ergo sum, for the robot it was no robot must ever harm a human being. We are living commensally with robots but we have no first law of robotics in them, they hurt human beings everyday. Everywhere.
Those injuries range from the trivial to the fatal, to the cosmic. Of course, theyre helping people to charge you more. Thats trivial, right? Theyre letting other people know when you need everything from a hamburger to a sexual interaction to a house mortgage, and of course the people on the other end are the repeat players whose calculations about just how much you need, whatever it is, and just how much youll pay for it, are being built by the data mining of all the data about everybody that everybody is collecting through the robots.
But it isnt just that youre paying more. Some people in the world are being arrested, tortured, or killed because theyve been informed on by their robots. Two days ago the New York Times printed a little story about the idea that we ought to call them trackers that happen to make phone calls rather than phones that happen to track us around. They were kind eough to mention the topic of todays talk, though they didnt mention the talk, and this morning the New York Times has an editorial lamenting the death of privacy and suggesting legislation. Heres the cosmic harm our robots are doing us, they are destroying the human right to be alone.
One thought that occurs to me is that men will continue to withdraw from nature in order to create an environment that will suit them better.
Kitchen units will be devised that will prepare automeals, heating water and converting it to coffee.
Complete lunches and dinners, with the food semiprepared, will be stored in the freezer until ready for processing.
The appliances of 2014 will have no electric cords, of course.
Much effort will be put into the designing of vehicles with Robot-brains.
There will be increasing emphasis on transportation that makes the least possible contact with the surface.
By 2014, only unmanned ships will have landed on Mars, though a manned expedition will be in the works and in the 2014 Futurama will show a model of an elaborate Martian colony.
For short-range travel, moving sidewalks (with benches on either side, standing room in the center) will be making their appearance in downtown sections.
In 2014, there is every likelihood that the world population will be 6,500,000,000 and the population of the United States will be 350,000,000.
Synchronous satellites, hovering in space will make it possible for you to direct-dial any spot on earth.
Communications will become sight-sound and you will see as well as hear the person you telephone.
In fact, one popular exhibit at the 2014 Worlds Fair will be such a 3-D TV, built life-size, in which ballet performances will be seen.
Part of the General Electric exhibit today consists of a school of the future in which such present realities as closed-circuit TV and programmed tapes aid the teaching process.
Robots will neither be common nor very good in 2014, but they will be in existence.
The world of A.D. 2014 will have few routine jobs that cannot be done better by some machine than by any human being. Mankind will therefore have become largely a race of machine tenders"
Even so, mankind will suffer badly from the disease of boredom.
The lucky few who can be involved in creative work of any sort will be the true elite of mankind, for they alone will do more than serve a machine.
Indeed, the most somber speculation I can make about A.D. 2014 is that in a society of enforced leisure, the most glorious single word in the vocabulary will have become work!
i thought as technology advanced the general populous would get smarter. i was wrong.
access to know about or how to do just about anything in the palm of your hand. wasted on useless social networking apps.
Blade Runner with a dollop of Brazil is where we seem to be.Blade Runner
We're all optimistic about how I'M special and I can get away unharmed from doing stupid things but there has to be a law to prevent all those other morons from doing the same. We're hypocrites.Yep, the average population just gets lazier and stupider as time goes by. When you have to pass laws and tell people not to do obviously stupid, dangerous shit like texting while driving and otherwise inappropriately misusing your cell phone like in school zones, then obviously advancing technology is failing to overcome the average, stupid consumer.
Which is why the government is panicking over Google Glass and already passing local laws against using it while driving, and it hasn't even been officially released yet. And all because of incredibly stupid people who shouldn't even be driving cars in the first place.
-physicists will have some idea of what to do with the Higgs boson, but practical applications will still be years off. Expect lots of interesting articles, theories, and speculation.
-a significant fraction of the US population will still think that Jesus made the dinosaurs, and a slightly less significant fraction will still think he did it within the last ten thousand years.
"We give evil it's greatest power through our belief in it."
