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Cruel to be kind: Robot punches human to help obey Asimov's rules in the future?

By Hank Campbell in Science 2.0
October 13, 2010
Profile picture for user Hank
Submitted by Hank on Wed, 10/13/2010 - 11:09
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72669

Some Slovenian researchers may be missing the point of Isaac Asimov's fictional (yet lofty, and therefore implicity hoping-to-be-followed) Laws of Robotics.  From from Asimov's third robot story, "Liar!",  published in May 1941's Astounding magazine, here they are:

1. A robot may not injure a human, or allow a human to be injured. 
2. A robot must follow any order given by a human that doesn't conflict with the First Law. 
3. A robot must protect itself unless that would conflict with the First or Second Laws.

Not everyone agrees, of course.   The human-hating contingent at Gizmodo says Asimov's Laws of Robotics Are Total BS. 

But back to Slovenia.    Borut Povše, from a robotics lab at the University of Ljubljana, has a robot hitting his friends over and over, causing mild to unbearable pain - because, he says, assessing human-robot pain thresholds is important to the future of robotics.

Read the whole strange tale at New Scientist (though you'll need to create a login) or just comment on the title, as most people do.

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