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Quantum fluctuations in space, science, exploration and other cosmic fields... served up regularly by MSNBC.com science editor Alan Boyle since 2002.

Alan Boyle covers the physical sciences, anthropology, technological innovation and space science and exploration for MSNBC.com. He is a winner of the AAAS Science Journalism Award, the NASW Science-in-Society Award and other honors; a contributor to "A Field Guide for Science Writers"; and a member of the board of the Council for the Advancement of Science Writing.

Check out Boyle's biography or send a message to Cosmic Log via cosmiclog@msnbc.com.



Killer robots ... friend or foe?

Posted: Tuesday, February 26, 2008 7:15 PM by Alan Boyle

Thousands of robots are already on the battlefield in Iraq and Afghanistan, but what happens when you hand the robot a gun and turn it loose?

Some researchers fear that giving military robots autonomy as well as ammo is the first step toward a "Terminator"-style nightmare, while others suggest that in some scenarios, weapon-wielding robots could someday act more humanely than humans.

The pros and cons of killer robots are taking center stage Wednesday in London, at what's considered the world's oldest military think tank, the Royal United Services Institute.

On one side of the issue is Ronald Arkin, a robotics researcher at Georgia Tech who is working on a Pentagon-funded project to build a sense of ethics into battlefield robots - "an artificial conscience, if you will," he told me.


AP
Design engineer Gary Morin demonstrates
Foster-Miller's weaponized SWORDS robot.

"The basic rule is to try to engineer a system that will comply as best it can, given the information that it has, with the laws of war," Arkin explained. "And it's my belief that eventually we can do better than humans in this regard."

On the other side is Noel Sharkey, a robotics expert at Britain's University of Sheffield who served as chief judge for the long-running TV show "Robot Wars." 

Nowadays, Sharkey is sounding the alarm about the prospect of real-life robot wars: He's calling for an international ban on autonomous weapon systems until it can be shown that they can obey the laws of war.

"I think we should be addressing this immediately," Sharkey told me. "I think we've already stepped over the line."

Killer robots aren't on their own ... yet
That doesn't mean killer robots are on the loose. To date, the battlefield 'bots have been used as not-so-autonomous extensions of human warfighting capabilities. For example, the missile-armed Predator drones that have played such a prominent role in Iraq and Afghanistan are remote-controlled by teams of living, breathing pilots.

On the ground, robots have traditionally done reconnaissance or hunted for roadside bombs. Just recently, the Pentagon just went through a tangled procurement process to order up to 3,000 next-generation machines. (After a legal battle, the contract was won by iRobot, which also makes the Roomba vacuum cleaner and other robotic helpers.)

Last year, the Pentagon started sending gun-toting robots to Iraq, but even those robots aren't designed for autonomous operation. Instead, they're remote-controlled by human operators and are equipped with fail-safe systems that shut them down if they go haywire.

What worries Sharkey is that the military may be on a slippery slope leading to a robotic arms race. "My real concern is that the policies are going to make themselves, that the 'autonomization' of weapons will creep in piecemeal," he told me.

For example, Sharkey pointed out that the Pentagon is already on a path to make a third of its ground combat vehicles autonomous by 2015. "Then you'll put a weapon in one of them, and then it will gradually creep in bit by bit.," he said.

He also pointed to the Pentagon's roadmap for billions of dollars' worth of robotic research over the next 25 years. As the United States and its allies put more and more robots on the battlefield, their rivals will surely follow. "Once you build them, they're easy to copy," Sharkey said. "The trouble is that we can't really put the genie back in the bottle."

Even if the United States takes care to build robots with a "conscience," others may feel under no pressure to do likewise. A couple of years ago, Iranian-backed Hezbollah guerrillas sent a remote-controlled drone over Israel, and Sharkey said al-Qaida and other terrorists could follow suit with their own breeds of robo-bombers.

"If you don't really give a toss, you can just put an autonomous weapon running into a crowd anywhere," Sharkey said. "It's only a matter of time before that happens."

Killer robots with a conscience?
Arkin agrees with Sharkey that it's high time to start thinking about the implications of autonomous weapon systems.

"I think that's a reasonable debate, and there's good reason to have that debate at this time, just so we understand what we're creating," he said. "I would be content if it was decided that autonomous systems have to be banned from the battlefield completely."

But when it comes to designing the combat systems of the future, Arkin argued that there should be a place for autonomy, or at least an embedded sense of ethics. He pointed out that humans haven't always had a good track record on battlefield behavior.

"Human performance, unfortunately, is a relatively low bar," Arkin said.

One of Arkin's suggestions would apply even if a robot is under human control: The robot should be able to sense if something wasn't right about what it was being asked to do - and then require the human operator to override the robot's artificial conscience.

In other scenarios, the data flooding in about a potentially threatening encounter might be so overwhelming that mere mortals would not be able to process the input in time to make the right decision. "Ultimately, robots will have more sensors and better sensors than humans have to see the situation," Arkin said.

Arkin said he doesn't advocate the idea of creating robot armies to sweep over a battlefield. Rather, they would be used for targeted applications: For example, once an urban area is cleared of civilians, a robot could be set up to watch out for snipers and fire back autonomously, he said.

"The impact of the research I'm doing is, hopefully, going to save lives," he said.

But Arkin described his efforts as mere "baby steps" toward the creation of battlebots with a conscience. "There are no milestones or timetables for doing this right now," he said. "We're pioneering this work to see where it would lead."

New laws of robotics
This work goes way beyond science-fiction author Isaac Asimov's Three Laws of Robotics, which supposedly ruled out scenarios where robots could harm humans.

"Asimov contributed greatly in the sense that he put up a straw man to get the debate going on robotics," Arkin said. "But it's not a basis for morality. He created [the Three Laws] deliberately with gaps so you could have some interesting stories."

Even without the Three Laws, there's plenty in today's debate over battlefield robotics to keep novelists and philosophers busy: Is it immoral to wage robotic war on humans? How many civilian casualties are acceptable when a robot is doing the fighting? If a killer robot goes haywire, who (or what) goes before the war-crimes tribunal?

Sharkey said such questions should go before an international body that has the power to develop a treaty on autonomous weapons.

"In 1950, The New York Times was calling for a U.N. commission on robotic weapons," Sharkey said. "Here we are, 57 years later, and it's actually coming to pass - and we still haven't got it."

Update for 9:30 p.m. ET Feb. 26: I probably haven't done full justice to either Arkin's or Sharkey's point of view. For more about Arkin's work on robotic ethics, including a meaty technical report, check out his home page at Georgia Tech. For more about Sharkey's views, click on over to this article from Computer Magazine as well as his home page at the University of Sheffield.

Update for 6:30 p.m. ET Feb. 27: A sharp-eyed reader said that the picture of the robot I originally used on this item was not actually equipped with a gun. I've replaced that picture with a different one showing the right robot. Thanks for setting me straight, Remoteman!

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Comments

Now with "The Creation of the Humanoids", how long is it before we read about something going horribly wrong with a "Klicker", and it killing innocent people. December 21, 2012 is right around the corner, and "The Time is Near" Remember, Trust_No1!
wow i didnt know that there were KILLER ROBOTS in iraq
I think an important advantage that a robot soldier (either autonomous or remote controlled) has over a human soldier is that the robot would not be fearing for his life.  Many situations where civilians and innocents are killed arise because a human soldier comes under attack, fears for his own safety, and fires back without actually knowing who attacked him.  A robot would not be under the same "fight or die" pressure and could take more time to evaluate the situation.  
Can you say "Skynet"!
Still the genie so to speak is out of the bottle. To me its human nature to tinker.  From cloning to genetic research lines can be drawn but will not necessarily be followed.  We are constantly pushing the envelope that is a our nature.  Tell us 'people can't fly or 'you will never get to the moon' then what happens.  Knowledge is not good or bad its how you use it.  As said by the author just because we will follow these guidelines does not mean others will. There are plenty of examples of when people pressed into a corner will cross that line or just do it for greed. I am not sure what the solution is but I will say that the only way supress knowledge is for us to de-evolve and that's just not going to happen.
Good bit of reporting Alan.

I find the last quote you included interesting. What was the likely cause for concern on the part of the New York Times in 1950? My guess would be the post WWII trauma over the German V-1 and V-2 missiles. Even so early on it was evident that unmanned weapons posed many ethical questions that were only going to become more complex. A missile doesn't understand the political opinions of each person it kills. Today that same issue has evolved into machines not with indiscriminant killing power, but the ability to target specific people. Is that a danger? Of course it is!

Another interesting topic is the idea that one day battlefields will be occupied not by soldiers but only by these drones. On the one hand, having machines kill other machines in war would spare us from human casualties. On the other hand, we would be giving potentially intelligent machines all of the weapons. Then what?
Joseph, I wondered about that myself. I'm too cheap to buy something from the NYTimes archive just to check out the article, but I'm guessing it's either of these:

http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F10917FA3C5815738FDDA00994D9415B8089F1D3


http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F10711FA395E15738FDDAD0A94D1405B8089F1D3
As long as they are remotely human controlled, there should be no question of conscience.  The policy should be "no fully autonomous devices."
I have just invented "Flying Killer Robot Squirrels" and I have Programmed them to kill mostly all the stupid idiots that want to spend all their friggin' time and money on New Ways to kill everything. God forbid we would spend our time and money on Education, Health Care and the flippin' poor! Forget that! Give me weirder weapons! YEA! Morons.
I WOULD RATHER HAVE KILLER ROBOTS, THAN TO LOSE ANOTHER FAMILY MEMBER IN A SENSELESS WAR
There's one book that talks about humanoids but that nobody is paying attention.  That book is very interesting because everything is happening right now.  By example, according to that book in the future every one will need a chip in his/her right hand or forehead to buy, and there will be a robot that will have a great political power in the whole world.  Note that this book is very ancient, and its called a "walking statue" instead of a "robot".  It's amazing to me that almost everyone knows this book but just a few of people really study it.  Yep...  it's the Bible.  Do a research on the Bible and you will find about the statue of the Beast which walks (a robot).  How would you call or describe a "robot" if you don't know what is it?  "A statue that walks!"  
The public generally lumps 3 things into the catagory of AI: Robots, Expert Systems, and AI.  None of these things are synonimous.  

What the military has deployed at the moment are simple electromechanical devices which are radio controlled or executing preprogramed steps.

What the military wants to deploy are what are known as Expert Systems, in this case designed for combat.  An Expert system is effective in it's area of "expertise" for which it is programmed.  These systems are able to adapt and react atonomously within a very narrow scope which is exactly what would work for combat robots.  The main drawback is that anything outside it's scope of expertise is unknown and must be handled by outside means such as a human operator.  For example, improvised weapons would be especially effective.  A human soldier would recognise that a person about to drop a washing machine on him/her is a threat, an expert system can't make that predictive leap.

The AI's of books and movies are just that, fiction. There is no HAL or Skynet in the works. A general purpose AI in any form is far from a reality.  What exists at the moment are expert systems in a variety of fields that operate within the very specific rules for which they are created.  True AI is a completely different concept from an expert system.  There is no risk of an expert system turning on it's creators or having a change of heart or taking over the world.  

Pop culture has given us a knee jerk reaction to AI without any concept of the reality of the situation.  This, as well as the ubiquity of the term AI in refering to systems that are not AIs has led to an uninformed and reactionary response among both the media and the public.
WELL JUST THIS ARTICLE TELLING US THAT THERE WAS KILLER ROBOTS IN IRQ AND AFGANISTAN SHOWS WHAT THE GOVERMENT HAS BEEN HIDING AND AMOUNGST THAT I DONT THINK THAT THE WHOLE GOAL OF MAKING A ROBO-HUMANOID IS GOING TO TURN OUT WORNG.
THINK AS IF WE SCOLD ITS NATURE AND IT LOOKS AT US AS WERE THE NEW ENEMY. WHAT WILL U DO THEN WHEN THERE KILLING US OF WHEN THERE SUPPOSE TO BE ON THE SIDE OF JUSTICE.
YET IT WILL PREVAIL THAT PEOPLE WILL DIE OVER THESE AND MORE PPL WILL CRY!
THE MONEY SPENT ON WAR ANY ONE YEAR WOULD FEED EVEY
PERSON ON THIS PLANET FOR THAT SAME YEAR, AND TREAT
THEIR ILLS AND SICKNESS EXCEPT FOR POSSABLY OUR
POLITCIANS IF YOU AGREE THEN SPEAK OUT.......
im glad we have killer robots... if terrorists have the right to put bombs in cars to kill our brave men and women, i say we have the right to stick an assult rife 5 feet next to them and blow their heads off
Building cybernetic weapons without 'Asimov's Laws of Robotics' is suicidal. Don't these guys read SciFi?  All kidding aside making war into a video game has been the Army goal since before it started recruiting with video games.
killer robots...star wars...hm...
What is truly scary about this is something that Noel Sharkey pointed out. It got me thinking that that it takes some really good programing and technology to make a sentient and safe combat robot. Doing it right takes a lot of people working together in the computer sciences and technology fields. The people that will do it right are the ones doing it now. I am not afraid of the people that will "do it right" it's the people who don't care that scare me.

If you've seen any battlebot video's you know that almost anyone with a penchant for electronics and computer programming can make something truly deadly with parts bought online and assembled in their garage. I am not saying we should fear people who hobby in robotics but if some organisation or country wanted to mount weapons on a platform that shot randomly at any moving target that does not require the expertise that we are talking about. It is the people who do care about "doing it wrong" that scare me and I almost think that we should be in a race to make our "partially sentient" combat drones as quick as possible because when it comes down to fighting again some kind of robotic beserker are you going to want to give that job to a person or a machine?
S.Korean Army in Iraq has already utilized a heat sensing robot with a machine gun to assist patrolling certain areas at night.

yes, it is on its own until someone remotly turns it off.
Not Robots. As stated the "killer robot" in Iraq & Afghanistan are remotely controlled by a human operator. Without the operator these so called "killer robot" will become a sitting piece of metal and plastic. The same way cars are operated, no driver no moving vehicle. I think the best terminology to use in this topic is, Killer Drones and not Killer Robots. Does anyone agree?    
Okay, I'm going to take flak for this, but here goes.

Wars, by their nature are destructive, they are messy, they are violent and costly.   They are particularly costly with regard to the loss of life.

And this is why we try to avoid them.  No one wants to send their sons or daughters off to war.

BUT....

If we stop sending people to fight our wars, one big incentive NOT TO FIGHT vanishes.

If we send a machine, it's just the money.  War becomes even more of a balance sheet equation then it is now.  
Its kind of chicken of us.  Fear of death has to be prevalent of both parties for any conflict to end peacefully; otherwise you end with an oppressor and the oppressed.
I'm more scared by a multiple weapon device that could cause mass murder with computer precision resulting in a single thought or thoughtless action causing a multitude of deaths. At least with robots and possible overseers the choices will be individualized to a possible microsopic analysis of each detail at ever increased speed and with increasingly convergent actions regarding preemptive and reactive decisions. The robot can afford to be shot at before deciding the loss of human life has become inevitable or it could sacrifice itself for a bad guy who will be taken down by another non-lethal choice with the new intel provided by that robot.
"a robot must not merely act in the interests of individual humans, but of all humanity"......

ain't that the scary one, perhaps an autonomous robot may not see things the way "we" do!!!....rather than arm a few robots with lethal weapons arm millions of them with non lethal weapons, give em the three laws of robotics and send them onto the battle field in an effort to NOT KILL!!!....might even help us obey our own fist law!!!....so keenly forgotten when pride clouds diplomatic judgement....the international law REALLY IS AS FOLLOWS...no autonomous killing,ever....but there appears to be those rushing to grant machines power over life....jurisprudence holds the deployers of such machines guilty of murder when innocents are killed, are there any pentagon planners willing to face a death sentance when an armed mechanism incorrectly kills one of our own or an innocent civilian (same thing like it or not)??? and if you do not believe me think of all the wrongful death suits against manufactures for non-autonomous devices.  Nay I say....never arm a dumb machine, it might just be smarter than you.
No one can kill and demage as much as mankind!
This whole issue is a load of horse feces.
I think a lot of people are forgetting one thing.  There is no evidence as yet that a machine with a computer for a brain will ever do anything but what it is programmed to do.  True arificial intelligence has not been seen anywhere and, so far, there is no proof that it will ever happen. So, the idea of machines taking over is VERY premature.

Also, I think some people have a very sad sense of priorities.  They do not protest when we send our young people out to die in the military, but object to sending machines out to fight instead.
Killer robots?  Really, I always thought that they would be inevitable but I didn't think that we would get there this soon.

I do have some questions for us all though.  Isn't it funny how mankind has taken almost all of its technological breakthroughs and learned to weaponize it/use it for destruction? What does this say about the people we have become?  If we were looking at ourselves from the outside-in and at the big picture of it all what would we say to outselves?

If we put just half of the thought into peaceful, beneficial, and practical technology then I believe the world would be a better place FOR US ALL; not just the USA.  I have little faith that this will happen but I can still dream.

Mark my words, we don't need a big rock from space or other unforseen disaster.  If we continue to look at the world the way we do and act the way we do as a species then we will do outselves in.  There are certain things that we just are not ready for and this is pretty high on that list.
Evil will always seek to capitalize on technology for uses other than the intended purpose.  Do you think Ben Franklin would have been so keen on harnessing the power of electricity if he knew that it would someday be used to put people to death?  As previously stated, we are by nature explorers, tinkerers, and generally curious.  It seems inevitable that technologies of this nature will continue to form so it remains the responsibilitie of the good to always be at least one step in front of the evil.
wow I have been to iraq and just returned and I did not know there were weapon welding robots.  The ones they do have are used for inspeciting vehicles and blowing up IED's.   Where they should ahve them is at the bases gaurding the perimeter.
Excellent, fewer Americans dead, more targets dead, what's the problem?

Of course, the hysterical part of all the handwringing is that no matter how many thousands of man hours it takes to program a "conscience" into them, it would take a grunt in the field with a laptop about five minutes to remove it with another program written lacking the "conscience".

Besides, "rules" of war should be removed, the Geneva Convention reduced to toilet paper, and when leaders start rattlingt their sabers, the consequences of total war, including targeting of civilians, should weigh on THEIR conscience long before the first bombs fall.

You make war acceptable from a societal standpoint by regulating it, and it becomes a societally acceptable answer to international disputes.
We're worried about autonomous weapons... NOW????

Geez, has everyone been asleep for the past 40 years?  You may not technically call them "robots" but the good old ICBM (intercontinental ballistic missile) is a remotely detatched machine with a sizeable weapon on it that can go into battlefields half a world away....same thing as an Iraq robot with a really big battery and a really big gun.

This is a moot point.  

Why argue about the albums we brought when we shouldn't even be at the party to begin with!


SuperFrogHQ  
Kill the civilians too...they are the ones the armies depend on for supplies. Kill the civilians and you hobble the military. War is evil so why do we pretend that there is a "certain morality" to war by establishing this warm and fuzzy concept of not harming civilians. Kill the source of supply and that starts with the civilian population.
It is easier to hack and modify code and machines than build them from scratch.  How long before legitimate autonomous robots following the "rules of war" would be captured or stolen and reprogrammed to be something else?
The scary thing is, these armed robots are just going to get more and more sophisticated and powerful. In the future, it may not be about training an army, it may be more about who can mass-produce military robots, with the larger number and better technology winning. A rogue country or terrorist organizaing manages to create some production facilities, and hey, they've got any army they can command without putting their own lives at risk.

How is the human race going to avoid destroying itself as this escalation spirals out of control?
I agree with SkullTracer. We should fear these "walking statues" and put all our faith on thousands of years of postcard wisdom. When it comes to the advancement of the human race, we should put our heads in the sand and throw ancient manuscripts at the things we fear, its worked so far right? Like back a thousand years ago when knights fully decked out in armor were accused of being the said "walking statues" . Psssshhhh.

There's no room for prophecy or fear in progression. The only evil in the world is postcard wisdom.

Asimov's "four" Laws of Robotics will work in this situation I think, and could eventually solve all our problems ... as long as our definition of "human" we give the AI omits people without the capacity to think for themselves who prefer throwing ancient manuscripts at what they fear.

Robots will change everything and that is inevitable.  No more manual labor, no more humans at risk (except those having ancient manuscripts thrown at them). It's just a shame that we've got drones rolling across the battlefield before we've got robots in mines or fighting fires or building infrastructure or exploring space (Mars rovers excluded). But that too is inevitable ... Invent a blue plastic cube filled with candy and the military will be using it first as a weapon.

If we didn't have stupid people throwing ancient manuscripts at what they fear, we wouldn't have war and this debate wouldn't be necessary. And even if SkullTracer and the other postcard sophists are right about prophecy, you can't do anything about it anyway ... its going to happen.

Besides ... maybe the Bible was really talking about another "statue that walks" ... like Bob Dole or Yao Ming or Charles Grodin or Dick Cheney.
The smartest in the world has the intelligence of a cockroach. People who have this fear of science and technology are simple superstitious people, many of which will live 30 years longer because of science and technology. I get that you folks are just scared and your hearts are in the right place and all, but do not be a enemy of progress. Stay out of the way, please and maybe if we are lucky science will carry us even further into the future.
With all the fear generated by:
1) global warming, 2) the cascadia plate on the West coast, 3) the expected shut down of the northern conveyer in the Atlantic, 4) 'Killer Astroids' 5) rapidly decreasing reserves of oil in the world leading to global war... etc. <name your fear here>
adding to humanity's multitude of superstious anxieties (those including Ghosts, UFO's, and the prophesied 'End of Days'), one can only determine that human's are silly creatures bent on exploiting the world until the world eventually decides it can do without us... All this fear when a beer would do.

Killer Robots are just another (and possibly quite effective) method of population reduction for an out of control meme driven host species.

(I.... have a meme.  That one's mine and I'm stickin to it :)

Good luck everyone... only about 1/3 of you will survive. LOL
"Do a research on the Bible and you will find about the statue of the Beast which walks (a robot).  How would you call or describe a "robot" if you don't know what is it?  "A statue that walks!""

So you're saying the Anti-Christ will be a Terminator?  Yeaaaahh... I'm not really too worried that either half of that scenario will come to fruition.
We used to call land mines or booby-traps "MAs" for Mechanical Ambush. Robots with guns are just the next logical step.
Humans: 0
Skynet: 1
I know people start thinking it's sci-fi crap right away but this is a super slippery slope.  Check out this blog and it explains the issues in a lay man and more comedic perspective - still the issues are real because the technologies are real.  http://www.alienreviews.com/b/robot-revolution.htm
Rules and guidelines only apply to those who choose to follow them.  Those who don’t care won’t.  If terrorist are willing to use explosive laden humans as weapons of mass terror, how much more satisfaction would they get if they could achieve the same thing, or worse, without sacrificing one of their own.

Should there be rules of use, Yes, but we shouldn’t be naive enough to think that there would or will be universal compliance.  
Fox M.
Why did you referrence the Dec. 21 2012 date?
Do you actually believe the world is going to end in that date just cause the Mayans calendar ends there? Or because of the spybots on the web or ancient profets? Or the maybe suppose to happen earth shift?
Sorry Im not trying to be sarcastic its just that I dont see how this ads up to the topic, also things like that can cause people to panic and do horrible things. If you were being sarcastic also or just saying it as a stupid remark of our ending then ignore this and I support you. If you truly believe it then you might be ignorant
taking the horror out of war (police) duty---war and killing turned into a vidio game???? robot or car?? war or race??-who makes best machine wins, not who is just---money (greed)will always win out-- soon the few wont even need humans to run thier machines.
Very interesting, both the article and the comments. I wonder though, if "rules of use" will do more then placate nervous people, for a while? Rules of engagement have been developed for many years now, but that has not prevented the World Trade Center or any other attack on non-combatants throughout history. Mankind seems destined to use our intelligence to find ways to kill each other in support of one cause or another. It's sad to think this is nothing more then basic survival of the fitest. For all our intelligence, we really are stupid. Perhaps we may yet scare ourselves enough one day to save our species. Autonomous robots in war or anywhere else? I think I am lucky to be in my 60's. Although I will probably not see the outcome, I am very curious as to how far we take it.
SkullTracer - There is another kind of robot, it's called a "Godbot".  The Godbot is programmed to make comments on blogs about the bible and god no matter the subject of the blog.  Godbots are everywhere and cannot be stopped or reprogrammed for useful purposes.  They are also VERY ANNOYING!
Don't forget the part about the multiheaded beast with a bunch of eyes and faces.  Maybe thats a robotic hydra!
Oh fret, fret, fret...life is just going to be like the movies...cripes what hyperbole. The Unmanned Ground Vehicles (UGV's) that have been deployed with a weapon are all human controlled, just like every remote weapon system out there. It will be years and years and years (with all sorts of very public blessings) before you ever see an autonamous weapon system out there. Sharkey is a crazy alarmist. Everyone has seen Terminator. The press is going to be all over the first problem with a weaponized UGV. Whoever in the military gave the go-ahead for their use is going to lose his or her job. While these REMOTE (not robots...wrong term) systems can save lives TODAY, they are not being used because of the fear ginned up by articles like this and alarmists like Sharkey. Let him get shot at sometime, then he might be more comfortable having a remote system do the job.
The UGV in the picture is a TALON, made by Foster-Miller for explosive ordnance disposal. It is not a SWORDS.


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