The American military is planning to build robot soldiers that
will not be able to commit war crimes like their human comrades
in arms.
The US Army and Navy have both hired experts in the ethics
of building machines to prevent the creation of an amoral Terminator-style
killing machine that murders indiscriminately.
By 2010 the US will have invested $4 billion in a research
programme into "autonomous systems", the military
jargon for robots, on the basis that they would not succumb
to fear or the desire for vengeance that afflicts frontline
soldiers.
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A British robotics expert has been recruited by the US Navy
to advise them on building robots that do not violate the Geneva
Conventions.
Colin Allen, a scientific philosopher at Indiana University's
has just published a book summarising his views entitled Moral
Machines: Teaching Robots Right From Wrong.
He told The Daily Telegraph: "The question they want answered
is whether we can build automated weapons that would conform
to the laws of war. Can we use ethical theory to help design
these machines?"
Pentagon chiefs are concerned by studies of combat stress in
Iraq that show high proportions of frontline troops supporting
torture and retribution against enemy combatants.
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