Space Industry and Business News  
Merciless robots will fight future wars: researcher

There is a "disturbing" cross between robotics and terrorism, according to Singer, who told of a website that lets visitors detonate improvised explosive devices from home computers.
by Staff Writers
Long Beach, California (AFP) Feb 5, 2009
Robots will be armies of the future in a case of science fact catching up to fiction, a researcher told an elite TED gathering on Wednesday.

Peter Singer, who has authored books on the military, warned that while using robots for battle saves lives of military personnel, the move has the potential to exacerbate warfare by having heartless machines do the dirty work.

"We are at a point of revolution in war, like the invention of the atomic bomb," Singer said.

"What does it mean to go to war with US soldiers whose hardware is made in China and whose software is made in India?"

Singer predicts that US military units will be half machine, half human by 2015.

The US Army already recruits soldiers using a custom war videogame, and some real-world weapon controls copy designs of controllers for popular videogame consoles.

Attack drones and bomb-handling robots are already common in battle zones.

Robots not only have no compassion or mercy, they insulate living soldiers from horrors that humans might be moved to avoid.

"The United States is ahead in military robots, but in technology there is no such thing as a permanent advantage," Singer said. "You have Russia, China, Pakistan and Iran working on military robots."

There is a "disturbing" cross between robotics and terrorism, according to Singer, who told of a website that lets visitors detonate improvised explosive devices from home computers.

"You don't have to convince robots they are going to get 72 virgins when they die to get them to blow themselves up," Singer said.

Robots also record everything they see with built-in cameras, generating digital video that routinely gets posted online at YouTube in graphic clips that soldiers refer to as "war porn," according to Singer.

"It turns war into entertainment, sometimes set to music," Singer said. "The ability to watch more but experience less."

Robotics designer David Hanson offered hope when it comes to making robots a little more human.

Hanson builds robots that have synthetic flesh faces and read people's expressions in order to copy expressions.

"The goal here is not just to achieve sentience, but empathy," Hanson said.

"As machines are more capable of killing, implanting empathy could be the seeds of hope for our future."

Hanson demonstrated a lifelike robotic bust of late genius Albert Einstein that makes eye contact and mimics people's expressions.

"I smiled at that thing and jumped out of my skin when it smiled back," TED curator Chris Anderson quipped. "It's freaky."

Related Links
The latest in Military Technology for the 21st century at SpaceWar.com



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Longbow Data Link Tested On Apache Block 3 Powered Flight
Orlando FL (SPX) Feb 04, 2009
The LONGBOW Limited Liability recently marked the successful first powered flight of the LONGBOW Unmanned Aerial Systems Tactical Common Data Link Assembly (UTA) aboard the AH-64D Apache Block III attack helicopter.







  • SKorea to build top-speed information highway
  • Wireless At WARP speed
  • SPTI-BOLDT Group Argentina Chooses Hughes Broadband Satellite System
  • Online encyclopedia Wikipedia may tighten editing rules

  • NOAA-N Prime Launch Rescheduled For Friday
  • Ariane 5 Ready For HOT BIRD 10, NSS-9 And Spirale Satellites Launch
  • Arianespace To Launch Hispasat 1E
  • Arianespace Orders 35 Ariane 5 ECA Launchers From Astrium

  • Shanghai Airlines seeks capital injection
  • China Eastern may take three years to be profitable: chairman
  • First China-assembled Airbus set for May test flight: report
  • New Airbus joint-venture with China announced

  • DTECH Labs Offers Military Customer Sercure Comms
  • Communications And Power Industries Awarded Contract Supporting US Navy's NMT Program
  • Second Wideband Global SATCOM Satellite Shipped To Cape Canaveral
  • TSAT Set To Speed Up Data Rates Across The Air Force

  • $350-Million Spacecraft - Unload Carefully
  • State-Of-The-Art Grating For Gaia
  • ISRO-Built Satellite Fails After Five Weeks
  • Eutelsat Statement On The W2M Satellite

  • Raytheon Makes Executive Changes In Space Business
  • George Preston Chosen For 2009 Henry Norris Russell Lectureship
  • Stevens New Director Of Communications And Public Outreach For Space Foundation
  • ATK Appoints Blake Larson To Lead Space Systems Group

  • NASA Satellites Capture Sea Surface Heights Around The World
  • NOAA-N Launch Rescheduled
  • NOAA-N Prime Launch To Light Up Early Morning Sky
  • New Research Aircraft HALO Lands At Home Airport

  • Google Latitude pinpoints whereabouts of family, friends
  • GPS-Enabled Handsets Expected To Bypass The Economic Downturn
  • Toyota Announces Strategic Partnerships
  • Mio Technology Gives Navigation A New Spirit

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement