Munitions
manufactures under pressure from society have found a way of making weapons
which will kill the enemy but keep our army absolutely safe.
Last month a
campaign was launched that despite the potential comedy drew little mainstream
media attention. The Stop the Killer Robot campaign was launched at the House of
Commons and of course immediately draws your mind to Skynet or the ED209 from
RoboCop.
However, Killer
Robots actually exist and the campaign is to get a treaty signed before they go
into production. Dr Noel Sharkey, who some of us may remember from Robot Wars
back in the good ole’ days, is a founding member and was quoted at the launch
saying: “Robot
warfare and autonomous weapons, the next step from unmanned drones, are already
being worked on by scientists and will be available within the decade.”
Imagine a fire hydrant. A CCTV camera identifies you and the on board AI checks you as friend or foe. In the world of GPS, Satellite communication and WiFi an entire network of these killer robots could be patrolling and holding a front line of a battlefield or even a land border. The logical progression is to then fit this technology to those unmanned drones or just give them caterpillar tracks.
Imagine a fire hydrant. A CCTV camera identifies you and the on board AI checks you as friend or foe. In the world of GPS, Satellite communication and WiFi an entire network of these killer robots could be patrolling and holding a front line of a battlefield or even a land border. The logical progression is to then fit this technology to those unmanned drones or just give them caterpillar tracks.
It is easy to say that this is scaremongering
but South Korea demonstrated what it called a Autonomous Sentry in 2007. They then demonstrated a soldier approaching
the unit and being ordered to surrender to what at first glance looks a like a
camera from Big Brother house.
The
UN has commissioned a report into what it calls ‘lethal autonomous robotics’ which
draft versions appeared online at the end of April. The UN is already calling
for international meetings on this subject.
The campaign’s website states “Giving
machines the power to decide who lives and dies on the battlefield is an
unacceptable application of technology.”
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