It won't be long before we all have robot butlers bringing each of us delicious mint juleps while we lounge around the pool all day, letting Roomba and her cousins do our "people work" for us. In fact, some people are suggesting we deal with the issue of robot rights now -- before they get all uprise-y with their laser hands and their fancy Robot ACLU lawyers.Writing for Computer Law and Security Review, Anna Russel, from the University of San Diego, points out that if robots look, think and act like humans, it's going to be pretty hard to justify treating them as less than human from a purely legal standpoint.
One of Russel's most important points is that robots might want to do it with human beings. And robots are probably way more awesome at sex than people are, because they're robots. So there goes your chance of getting laid on Friday night.
All this robot-rights, human-robot-sex stuff, coupled with a Uruguayan man at the bar last week who looked just like Gaius Baltar has got us thinking that while we might not know the solution to this moral quandary, we're guessing it involves appeasing the robots, so that we don't have to start replacing swear words with words that sound almost exactly like swear words. And if that doesn't work, then, like the bumper sticker from the future says, "Shart happens."
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Friday 20 November
By Tom Z
Robot rights is just another of those things where people have wayyyyyy too much time on their hands.
Robots are like PCs, no more, no less. When we laws protecting the "Rights" of a PC, then we'll have the same for robots.
When will that happen. Um, never!
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Saturday 21 November
By stvjns
It's true that when Quantum computers come to the mainstream and robots are truly lifelike, there will be an interesting moment when we are forced to reconsider what constitutes "alive".
At the moment, computers are like fancy appliances, no more. So the issue is not yet in our face.
I am happy to see people thinking about the road ahead. Presumably their work today will be instrumental in my complimentary work tomorrow.
It's a wonderful world!
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Friday 04 December
By Jesse
Absolutely. The first thing they'll demand is the right to bear arms. I NEED that extra edge. They already don't feel pain. (Yet.) I'm pretty sure that's what caused things to go south in the Terminator series. Letting them think for themselves and giving them lasers that we forgot to arm ourselves with. Why does history always have to repeat itself?
Let's not be the first generation to free the comfortably enslaved robots. I say when the day comes, for the good of all mankind we shoot that Lincoln in the back of the head before he has even the chance to issue his own Gettysbot Address. (Sorry about that last one. It was just waiting in the wings. See I can stop. Help me.)
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Tuesday 29 December
By Matthew
How incredibly naive a view, Tom Z! If machines can ever think in ways like humans (and there are no reasons to suppose they cannot in a materialistic universe) then they should be afforded rights as sentient beings. We need to not screw this up and enslave the first minds we create.
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Tuesday 29 December
By Shran
When a robot, aware of itself, starts knocking at the civil rights door I'll give him a fair trial. But... I'll probably never see such a robot in my life and wonder whether our grand kids will.
It's like philosophising about mobile phones while sending smoke signals and living in the 14th century.
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