Governments are considering using robots as cops in the future. Imagine telling the robot to put handcuffs on a suspect, and the robot rips both arms off to put handcuffs on the suspect. mission accomplished.
A little extreme, but robots can be dangerous if programmed by an evil mind.
If their task is to stop a criminal and prevent harm, eventually the robot will invent pre-crime. Just like…yup. The movie Minority Report!
In the future they establish pre-crime units and catch the criminals just BEFORE the crime happens.
Robots will probably just profile you based on your socio-economic status, internet searches, school grades, and banking history. They’ll profile you, kick down your door when your internet activity is at its lowest (meaning you’re probably asleep), and arrest you for whatever host of crimes you’re statistically most likely to commit.
True. But tell that to the millions of men who are invisible to women. There’s the real thing, then there’s an acceptable substitute.
A lot of men want the physical satisfaction. Unfortunately, the creature that provides that physical satisfaction demands all of your time/resources. That’s a hell of spread on that trade. Not to mention she could potentially ruin your life. How about separating the disaster from the physical satisfaction? Bam, fembots.
I have a pitch to Tesla for their fembots: changeable silicone faces. One night you can have Kathy Ireland. The next night, Janet Jackson. (In their youth, of course).
Then again, those bots will collect more data on you than Alexa. If you don’t wanna be spied on, best to keep them bots out of your home.
I get it, but there is another route to take - You know the term, I’m paying her to leave not to stay, but there are some risks Involved going that route.
It’s fine for me to accept cases like these as long as we don’t put chips in people’s brains who don’t need or want them.
‘Elon Musk implanted a chip in my brain – it’s the coolest thing that’s happened to me’
Last week, Noland Arbaugh made the opening move of the Speed Chess Championship in Paris – a competition featuring the game’s biggest names. More remarkable, though, is that, in a tournament world-first, he moved the pawn using only his mind.
Arbaugh, 30, is the world’s first recipient of a brain chip created by Neuralink, the brain-computer interface (BCI) company founded by Elon Musk. Chess has become a huge part of the 30-year-old’s life; it was one of the few things he could still do following an accident that left him paralysed below the shoulders. (He previously used a mouth stick to play games online.)
But since receiving the implant in January – and using his brain to move pieces across the board – it has become his portal to the rest of the world. The company released a video of him playing a month after his surgery; opening the Speed Chess Championship, he says, was “the coolest thing that’s happened to me”.
Neuralink was founded in California in 2016, the same year that a then 22-year-old Arbaugh was left quadriplegic after a freak accident while swimming in a lake, and the trip to France proved how much his life has changed since his surgery in January.
“It’s made me a lot more independent,” Arbaugh tells me when we meet in the basement of the e-sports venue where he has just finished rehearsing his opening move. He is dressed much the same as any millennial might be – cap, beard and a thin gold hoop earring – though accompanied by the modified wheelchair he has relied on for the past eight years, and his parents, who help him to drink and eat.
Yeah, same here. This is a unique case, and he wants it. That’s fine. Have fun. It’s more like an advancement in medicine than grand conspiracy to control society.
China’s First Robot Restaurant Will Destroy the ENTIRE Food Industry
China’s first fully robotic restaurant could drastically change or even disrupt the traditional structure of the food industry. With complete automation, these restaurants would be able to operate faster, more efficiently, and with lower labor costs. This could significantly reduce the need for human workers and decrease the overall cost of service.