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Yeah... go right on and believe that.
Jeremy Falcon
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mark merrens wrote: making logical judgments based on probability
Yeah... I prefer having some odds than no odds at all. So... slam them.
To alcohol! The cause of, and solution to, all of life's problems - Homer Simpson
----
Our heads are round so our thoughts can change direction - Francis Picabia
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Jeremy Falcon wrote: Let's give robots the power of God. That shouldn't cause any problems. It would be interesting to see if robots whose behavior was driven by neural-nets based on the behavior of human beings who claim to act/speak for/in-the-name-of "gods" were equally blood-thirsty and came up with pogroms, ethnic cleansings, and atrocities equal to said human beings.
“I speak in a poem of the ancient food of heroes: humiliation, unhappiness, discord. Those things are given to us to transform, so that we may make from the miserable circumstances of our lives things that are eternal, or aspire to be so.” Jorge Luis Borges
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BillWoodruff wrote: were equally blood-thirsty and came up with pogroms, ethnic cleansings, and atrocities equal to said human beings.
For being human yourself, you really have a low opinion of them. I happen to quite like humans. I think I'll stay one.
Jeremy Falcon
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mark merrens wrote: In any case, if all cars were guided by bots this is unlikely to happen Unless VB programmers are involved.
Or, a mismatch between metric and US measurement systems.
There are only 10 types of people in the world, those who understand binary and those who don't.
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"If you think it's expensive to hire a professional to do the job, wait until you hire an amateur." Red Adair.
Those who seek perfection will only find imperfection
nils illegitimus carborundum
me, me, me
me, in pictures
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Jeremy Falcon wrote: And the people living were 6 old people that were murderers and on their way to kill more people?
In that case lets just program the robotic car of these to fataly crash, removing them from other cars equations
Seriously, though: how do you know this is the case? And if you know, why can't the car? Why can't that other people's car? Why can't that other people's car decide and ... oh well, back to my initial statement again
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This will just bring on more car hacking. Use a car key to send an encoded signal which overflows a correct-key-match buffer and tells the car it really needs to kill all its occupants. National Security and hired assassinations made easy.
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The premise already is that the robotic car is programmed to kill its occupants under certain conditions (presumably to minimize the overall loss). I merely suggested additional conditions. And, yes, however these conditions are programmed, any software system can and will be hacked and abused.
The question is, how much damage will be incurred through abuse, manipulation, or just honest software errors, compared to the damage these systems may avert...
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mark merrens wrote: It is you humans Aha! I knew it.
There are only 10 types of people in the world, those who understand binary and those who don't.
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Oops! My positronic pathways must have malfunctioned for a nano-second.
"If you think it's expensive to hire a professional to do the job, wait until you hire an amateur." Red Adair.
Those who seek perfection will only find imperfection
nils illegitimus carborundum
me, me, me
me, in pictures
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mark merrens wrote: for a nano-second.
Which is like 1 human hour.
There are only 10 types of people in the world, those who understand binary and those who don't.
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You have programed the bot to make the value judgement that killing 2 people is always better than killing 6.
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It's not a value judgment: it's simple arithmetic.
"If you think it's expensive to hire a professional to do the job, wait until you hire an amateur." Red Adair.
Those who seek perfection will only find imperfection
nils illegitimus carborundum
me, me, me
me, in pictures
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Not making a choice is a choice as well.
But what if the computer has two options:
-Keep driving ahead and kill x pedestrians. ('do nothing')
-Steer the car into the nearest tree and kill y passengers.
All other possibilities have been evaluated and determined to be physically impossible.
(speed too high, braking distance too short, trees on both sides of the road, etc)
What should the computer do when there is no 'do nothing'?
If the decision of who is killed cannot be made by a computer then it must be escalated to a human.
But to which human?
-The passengers?
-The pedestrians?
Both have a personal interest in the decision so neither can be trusted to be fair.
Maybe the decision should be deferred to an impartial referee?
The computer could warn a government official, present him with all relevant data and then let him make a choice.
Or make the decision through a democratic process.
Ask a large number of responsible citizens what action hould be taken and then take the most popular course of action.
This can be done with modern technology.
Just get a notification on your smartphone with a small animation of each option and then tap the one you favor.
You could even disguise it as a game.
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jeroen1304 wrote: But what if the computer has two options: -Keep driving ahead and kill x pedestrians. ('do nothing')
-Steer the car into the nearest tree and kill y passengers.
Exactly this was the question in the article ...
Quote: jeroen1304 wrote: All other possibilities have been evaluated and determined to be physically impossible.
(speed too high, braking distance too short, trees on both sides of the road, etc)
jeroen1304 wrote: make the decision through a democratic process.
Ask a large number of responsible citizens what action hould be taken and then take the most popular
course of action.
You cannot take this route, 'cause there is no time for it. The decision has to be made in fractions of the next second.
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I think that's a fascinating scenario to think about, Mark. Consider the robot-in-the-car detects loss of consciousness in the driver somehow and is able to evaluate, given the flow of traffic, that any sudden stop will result in a multi-car pile-up with major loss of life while it is also able to conclude that a sudden sharp turn will take the vehicle off the roadway, but almost certainly kill the occupant.
Medical personnel in war, given an overflow of casualties, make rapid decisions (triage) about who gets treatment priority based on intuitive mortality assessments as well as, of course, whatever medical stats they can get. It would be interesting, to me, to know to what extent the current state-of-the-art triage strategies in war and natural disasters are using computer programs to assist evaluation.
Equally frightening is the idea of a "loyal" robot programmed to put the preservation of its owner above everyone/everything else. I observe that my mind associates the terms "loyal robot" with the typical spin-minions and henchmen/women of ... politicians.
cheers, Bill
“I speak in a poem of the ancient food of heroes: humiliation, unhappiness, discord. Those things are given to us to transform, so that we may make from the miserable circumstances of our lives things that are eternal, or aspire to be so.” Jorge Luis Borges
modified 13-May-14 18:58pm.
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BillWoodruff wrote: I think that's a fascinating scenario to think about, Mark. Consider the robot-in-the-car detects loss of consciousness in the driver somehow and is able to evaluate, given the flow of traffic, that any sudden stop will result in a multi-car pile-up with major loss of life while it is also able to conclude that a sudden sharp turn will take the vehicle off the roadway, but almost certainly kill the occupant.
Sounds rather unrealistic to me:
1. If the car is robot-controlled to start with, why can't it just go on driving?
2. If stopping your car could potentially cause lifes, what the hell were the other drivers/robot cars thinking?
3. If the other cars are also robot-controlled, why can't they collaborate to ensure a safe mutual slowdown?
4. Can't think of any reason why a sharp turn would be less dangerous to the rest of the traffic
BillWoodruff wrote: Equally frightening is the idea of a "loyal" robot programmed to put the preservation of its owner above everyone/everything else. I observe that my mind associates the terms "loyal robot" with the typical spin-minions and henchmen/women of ... politicians.
That could indeed be a problem, and car makers could in fact promote cars with 'improved survivability' for those who are willing to shell out the cash. Politicians could try to prevent that, but, realistically, by the time they can agree on a workable legislation the market will already be brimming with such discriminating cars that are hard to tone down or remove.
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I believe people die when their "time has come" and not at any other time. That's why people sometimes miraculously survive accidents where all odds seem to be against them. Like someone being disturbed by something on their way to catch a plane that crashes. Such "coincidences" have happened to myself a few times, and I've seen it happen to many others as well.
So from that perspective, no matter what you do to manipulate the outcome of a situation it's pointless - unless it's meant to facilitate the enevitable outcome. It's not magic, just a question of probabilities in the total scheme of energetic processes which stretch beyond the level of plain physical probabilities. Mind over matter, if you like...
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cosmogon wrote: I believe people die when their "time has come" and not at any other time. That's why people sometimes miraculously survive accidents where all odds seem to be against them. Like someone being disturbed by something on their way to catch a plane that crashes. Such "coincidences" have happened to myself a few times, and I've seen it happen to many others as well.
What a load of drivel.
If it were pre-ordained, then why would the pre-ordinance allow you to buy a plane ticket for a plane that is going to crash in the first place? And the other 237 people who do make the plane - their time was pre-ordained to be at exactly the same time?
This sort of rot comes from the selective memory of humans;
Miss a train because of traffic, and the train is bombed by the IRA (happened to me) - good dinner story.
Miss a train and the train goes to its destination more or less on time - not really a good story at all.
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"If it were pre-ordained, then why would the pre-ordinance allow you to buy a plane ticket for a plane that is going to crash in the first place?"
It could happen that way also - you just need one event to stop you from entering that plane. There are many possible to choose from. The main goal is your survival, whatever means it takes to reach that goal are taken into consideration. It's a dynamic process, just as with all other events in life, it just involves some factors that we usually are not aware of. Some call it "Framework 2" - a dimension of reality where all events are coordinated in order to fulfil all individual desires. It's the opposite of pre-ordained - all events are a consequence on free will and individual choice. On the other hand, a choice does itself create some kind of pre-ordination within it's own context, you can however change the outcome if the probabilities allows for it. I.e. you can still change your mind before you jump from that cliff, however, as soon as you have jumped there's usually no way back (unless it's not your time yet).
"And the other 237 people who do make the plane - their time was pre-ordained to be at exactly the same time?"
What's the difference between 237 people choosing to die together on a plane and 10.000 choosing to gather at a stadion to see a game of football? In both cases it's an individual choice that makes you go there, it's just the purpose that's different. Suicide however is generally a taboo so choosing (usually on a subconsciious level) to die in a plane crash or some other accident is an alternative and "legitimate way" to leave the planet.
And it's not always all passengers at a plane crash that die. Often some survive - and often in ways that you may call miraculous. Why then choose to get on the plane in the first place? Maybe they want that experience for some subconscious reason. Why do people do skydiving? It's dangerous like hell, but it's probably an incredible experience. Surviving death can be a great wake-up call - it can make you feel like being reborn and make you look at life in a completely new way. I know from personal experience...
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I can't respond here, lest it become Soapbox material.
Suffice to say, "what a load of old codswallop"
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If you truly believe the time of your death is predetermined, would you mind jumping off a cliff? I mean, doing it or not wouldn't make a difference, no?
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One could always jump off the cliff, and then manage to miss the ground.
Just don't forget to take a towel!
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Isn't that kind of the idea behind the "Final Destination" movies?
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