Feral Jundi

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Technology: War Robots, Ethics, and the Book ‘Wired for War’ by Peter Singer

Filed under: Books,Technology — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 11:24 AM

   What can I say?  We are now having this discussion, and it blows me away.  And as I speak, drones are killing folks in IraqAfghanistan, and Pakistan, and have been doing so for awhile.  The only safety measure is that they are so far not really autonomous.  But what happens when we cut the cord and let some robot or drone operate on it’s own?  What happens if that robot has a glitch and accidently kills the good guys?  Do you charge a robot with manslaughter, are they covered by the Geneva Convention, do we give them full burial honors at Arlington Cemetery when they pass?

  On a side note, I did get a chance to pick up Peter Singer’s book, and I read through it a little.  I will not give a full review, but there were some parts that were interesting.  Especially the section that discussed ground robots, and the first ever drawing of blood in this war by a ground robot.  Basically some soldiers put a Claymore mine on a MARCbot, and drove it into a pack of insurgents and blew them up. The total cost for that kill, about $8,000, plus whatever it costs the military for a claymore.  I think I could make or buy a cheaper Claymore carriage at a hobby store, but still, that field expedient weapon is a whole lot cheaper than launching a Javelin at the enemy. (and if it hurt the enemy and/or saved lives, bravo!)

   The insurgents came up with a similar type deal using a skateboard according to the book.  I guess they made an explosive laden skateboard with motors on the wheels.  The insurgents powered it up, and set it rolling slowly towards a patrol, thinking the patrol would not pay attention to a slow rolling toy.  Luckily the patrol locked on to the thing, because it was moving against the wind.  The total cost of this weapon was way cheaper than the MARCbot, but could have easily succeeded if used properly.

   So with these humble beginnings of ground combat robots, will we one day see a robot that thinks on it’s own?  I do know that the desire for these things is driving the market big time.  With a highly competitive robotics market and a war that is not going away anytime soon, we will begin to see these kinds of autonomous war robots that science fiction, and now academics are talking about.  Good or bad, the future is now. –Matt

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Military robots must be taught a warrior code

16 Feb 2009

Autonomous military robots must be taught a strict warrior code or they could turn on their human masters, a US report warns.

I, Robot: Military robots must be taught a warrior code

The warnings of a potential revolt, as envisaged by the science writer Isaac Asimov in his chilling I, Robot series of stories, appear in the first major report on robot ethics Photo: 20TH CENTURY FOX

The warnings of a potential revolt, as envisaged by the science writer Isaac Asimov in his chilling I, Robot series of stories, appear in the first major report on robot ethics.

The report, by researchers from the Ethics and Emerging Technologies Group at California Polytechnic State University, was funded by the US navy office of naval research.

Mindful of the US deployment in two major theatres of war, the military is keen to pursue alternatives to manpower, including Terminator-style armed robots.

(more…)

Monday, May 5, 2008

Technology: Robobug Goes to War

Filed under: Technology — Tags: , , , , , — Matt @ 2:46 PM

Hey, thanks to Doug for sending me this one. UAVs and robotics in the war-zone, are becoming commonplace, and this kind of technology is the natural course of this technology. How practical it will become, will be dictated by the grunt in the field or the cop on the streets. And into the future we go….. -Head Jundi

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Robobug

Plans for a robot that can crawl like a spider are ‘well developed’
 

Robobug goes to war: Troops to use electronic insects to spot enemy ‘by end of the year’
By DANIEL COCHLIN

It may have seemed like just another improbable scene from a Hollywood sci-fi flick Tom Cruise battling against an army of robotic spiders intent on hunting him down.
But the storyline from Minority Report may not be quite as far fetched as it sounds.
British defence giant BAE Systems is creating a series of tiny electronic spiders, insects and snakes that could become the eyes and ears of soldiers on the battlefield, helping to save thousands of lives.
Prototypes could be on the front line by the end of the year, scuttling into potential danger areas such as booby-trapped buildings or enemy hideouts to relay images back to troops safely positioned nearby.
Soldiers will carry the robots into combat and use a small tracked vehicle to transport them closer to their targets.
Then they would swarm into the building and relay images back to the soldiers’ hand-held or wrist-mounted computers, warning them of any threats inside.
BAE Systems has just signed a £19million contract to develop the robots for the US Army.

Plans for a creature that can crawl like a spider are said to be well developed, and researchers eventually hope to be able to create creatures that can slither like a snake or fly like a dragonfly.
While some of the creatures will be fitted with small cameras, others will be equipped with sensors that will be able to detect the presence of chemical, biological or radioactive weapons. (more…)

Saturday, May 3, 2008

Cool Stuff: Spider Car

Filed under: Cool Stuff,Technology,Video — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 10:50 AM

Now mount a M 240 to this thing, and you have a party. Could you imagine going down the streets in Baghdad with this thing, and especially if it was faster, quiet, and well armored? LOL!! -Head Jundi

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