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Robot Apocalypse: 'Terminator,' 'Matrix' Doomsday Scenarios Called Unlikely (VIDEOS)

Robots

First Posted: 02/24/2012 2:47 pm Updated: 02/24/2012 2:47 pm

By: Adam Hadhazy, Life's Little Mysteries Contributor
Published: 02/24/2012 12:48 PM EST on Lifes Little Mysteries

In this weekly series, Life's Little Mysteries explores the plausibility of popular sci-fi concepts. Warning: Some spoilers ahead!

 

If a bunch of sci-fi flicks have it right, a war pitting humanity against machines will someday destroy civilization. Two popular movie series based on such a "robopocalypse," the "Terminator" and "Matrix" franchises, are among those that suggest granting greater autonomy to artificially intelligent machines will end up dooming our species. (Only temporarily, of course, thanks to John Connor and Neo.)

Given the current pace of technological development, does the "robopocalypse" scenario seem more far-fetched or prophetic? The fate of the world could tip in either direction, depending on who you ask.

While researchers in the computer science field disagree on the road ahead for machines, they say our relationship with machines probably will be harmonious, not murderous. Yet there are a number of scenarios that could lead to non-biological beings aiming to exterminate us.

"The technology already exists to build a system that will destroy the whole world, intentionally or unintentionally, if it just detects the right conditions," said Shlomo Zilberstein, a professor of computer science at the University of Massachusetts.

Machines at our command

Let's first consider the optimistic viewpoint: that machines always will act as our servants, not the other way around.

"One approach is not to develop systems that can be so dangerous if they are out of control," Zilberstein said.

Something like Skynet – the computerized defense network in "The Terminator" that decides to wipe out humanity – is already possible. So why has such a system not been built? A big reason: Nuclear-armed nations such as the United States would not want to turn over any of the responsibility for launching warheads to a computer. "What if there is a bug in the system? No one is going to take that risk," said Zilberstein. [What If There Were Another Technologically Advanced Species?]

On a smaller scale, however, a high degree of autonomy has been granted to predator drones flying in the Middle East. "The number of robotic systems that can actually pull the trigger autonomously is already growing," said Zilberstein.

Still, a human operator monitors a drone and is given the final say whether to proceed with a missile strike. That certainly is not the case with Skynet, which, in the "Terminator" films, is given control of America's entire nuclear arsenal.

In "The Terminator," the military creates the program with the objective of reducing human error and slowness of response in case of an attack on the U.S.

When human controllers come around to realizing the danger posed by an all-powerful Skynet, they try to shut it down. Skynet interprets this act as a threat to its existence, and in order to counter its perceived human enemy, Skynet launching America's nukesat Russia,  provoking a retaliatory strike. Billions die in a nuclear holocaust.Skynet then goes on to build factories that churn out robot armies to eliminate the remainder of humankind.

In a real-life scenario, Zilberstein thinks simple safeguards would prevent an autonomous system from threatening more people than it is designed to, perhaps in guarding country's borders, for example. Plus, no systems would be programmed with the ability to make broad strategic decisions the way Skynet does.

"All the systems we're likely to build in the-near future will have specific abilities," Zilberstein said. "They will be able to monitor a region and maybe shoot, but they will not replace a [human] general."

Robots exceeding our grasp

Michael Dyer, a computer scientist at the University of California, Los Angeles, is less optimistic. He thinks "humans will ultimately be replaced by machines" and that the transition might not be peaceful. [Americans Want Robots, and They're Willing to Pay]

Keep clicking for some of the creepiest humanoid robots. Story continues below slideshow.
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  • Meet Jules, the newest and most realistic humanoid robot yet from David Hanson and the team at Hanson Robotics.

  • A robot that looks just like its creator (www.newscientist.com).

  • Engineers at Kagawa University in Japan are developing a talking robotic version of the human mouth: To enable the robot's speaking abilities, engineers at Japan's Kagawa University used an air pump, artificial vocal chords, a resonance tube, a nasal cavity, and a microphone attached to a sound analyzer as substitutes for human vocal organs.

  • ACTROID-F in AIST Open Lab 2010.

  • Robot modeled after Albert Einstein. Einstein mimics the facial expressions he detects in others. Smile at him, and he'll smile back.

  • Cybernetic human dance demo in DCEXPO, 2010.

  • Humanoid face created by Hanson Robotics (www.hansonrobotics.com). Robotics scientists at Hanson previously created animatronic puppets for Disney studios.

  • Animatronic baby mechanism for anonymous TV series. Built by Chris Clarke for CNFX Workshop.

  • Taiwanese Kissing Robots (NTUST Robot) were exhibited in AutoRob2009 in Gwangju, Korea. They were developed by Prof. Chyi-Yeu Lin's research team in National Taiwan University of Science and Technology.

  • Robot girl with silicone skin.

The continued progress in artificial intelligence research will lead to machines as smart as we are in the next couple hundred years, Dyer predicts. "Advanced civilizations reach a point of enough intelligence to understand how their own brain works, and then they build synthetic versions of themselves," he says.

The desire to do so might come from attempts at establishing our own immortality – and that opportunity might be too much for humanity to resist. (Whowouldn't want to spend their ever-after with their consciousness walking around in a robot shell?)

Maybe that sort of changeover from biology to technology goes relatively smoothly. Other rise-of-the-machines scenarios are less smooth.

Dyer suggests a new arms race of robotic system could result in one side running rampant. "In the case of warfare, by definition, the enemy side has no control of the robots that are trying to kill them," Dyer said. Like Skynet, the manufactured might turn against the manufacturers.

Or an innocuous situation of overdependency on robots spirals out of control. Suppose a factory that makes robots is not following human commands, so an order is issued to shut off power to the factory. "But unfortunately, robots happen to manage the power station and so they refuse. So a command is issued by humans to stop the trucks from delivering necessary materials to the factory, but the drivers are robots, so they also refuse," Dyer says.

Perhaps using the Internet, robotic intelligences wrest control of a society that depends too much on its automata. ("The Animatrix," a 2003 collection of short cartoons, including some back stories for "The Matrix" movies, describes such a situation.)

Overall, a bit of wisdom would prevent humankind from falling into the traps dreamed up by Hollywood screenwriters. But the profit motive at companies has certainly engendered more automation, and the Cold War's predication on the threat of mutually assured destruction points out that rationality does not always win.

"Doomsday scenarios are pretty easy to create, and I wouldn't rule out that kind of possibility," said Zilberstein. "But I'm personally not that worried."

Plausibility rating: Military leaders and corporations probably will not be so stupid as to add high levels of programmed autonomy to catastrophically strong weapon systems and critical industrial sectors. We give the "robopocalypse" two out of four Rocketboys.

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By: Adam Hadhazy, Life's Little Mysteries Contributor Published: 02/24/2012 12:48 PM EST on Lifes Little Mysteries In this weekly series, Life's Little Mysteries explores the plausibility of pop...
By: Adam Hadhazy, Life's Little Mysteries Contributor Published: 02/24/2012 12:48 PM EST on Lifes Little Mysteries In this weekly series, Life's Little Mysteries explores the plausibility of pop...
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04:38 PM on 12/07/2012
If complete technological collapse of computers, and computer related areas happened tomorrow, the only effect it would have on me is posting on this site. I truly have no worries about this, and in many ways would welcome it to a point.
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uniqumm
Hot Snark served with relish
01:47 PM on 04/15/2012
It took many wrong turns to find this thread again to post this:

"But I'm personally not that worried."

WORRY!

WORRY, ......................WORRY A LOT!

Human intelligence is much more than just the logic circuitry in our skulls. The same is true of any animal with a brain.
There is a whole system that interacts with it which runs via glands that secrete hormones and other messengers. The most crucially relevant is the system that interacts with our "logic" circuits which manifests itself as emotions, inhibitions, and all that subtle, under-the-surface stuff. That's interconnected to hardwired response patterns that regulates our behavior and responses. It's a product of many millions of years of evolution. It determines what we're likely to do or not do (again, all animals with brains have that).

AN ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE WOULDN'T HAVE THAT!

Think of a complete sociopath with enormously fast response times and a capability to work through enormous numbers of permutations to a "problem" to deep, deep levels. THAT'S AN ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE.

It wouldn't have pity, compassion, love, hate, sympathy, or a desire to be petted. None of that. It could work out a crossword puzzle for you or take you apart to puzzle out what makes you tick with the same amount of emotion or reluctance: NONE!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CatesA
desperately seeking moderator approval
12:39 AM on 03/11/2012
Even if machines become sentient, isn't the idea that they would be "war-like" a bit of a conceit? Perhaps they would view us with indifference, and find their own sense of meaning. They might just say "screw this place, we're going to Mars."
12:46 PM on 03/30/2012
They will be warlike because we design them, and that's who we are.
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vampyreincubus
Hate only breeds hate.
04:20 PM on 03/06/2012
Isn't that exactly how they always look at it in the movies? Like an impossibility. Even through out history every civilization that ever fell did not believe it could happen let alone would happen. Arrogance seems to do us in every time.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nanjemoy
first, check your satire-o-meter.
10:15 AM on 03/05/2012
RISE OF THE MACHINES - Circa 1500 BCE - Death by inclined plane.

I think there is a problem with definition here. What is a Robot?

I would give you that a robot must have moving parts. So dental fillings are not robots. But eye-glasses are.

Or maybe robots must also be self propelled using some power source. Like a car.

How much AI needs to be in play for a machine to be called a robot?

If we create un-intelligent, but super-agressive anti-biotic nanobots, are they Robots? Because if machines with little or no AI are robots, they virtually any machine is a robot.

I tend to support that thought. Robots and machines are on a continuum just like intelligence.

But by this reasoning, then nuclear bombs are robots.

Our real problem is that we don't actually know what humans are.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
03:45 PM on 03/04/2012
God people can be so silly...

Folks, Relax. The future is NOT going to be whatever is technologically possible... the technology that will occur is only that technology that people will be willing to pay for.

No electronic object that human beings have devised is capable of standing ordinary sunlight for more than a few years time. The most technologically robust machines still require constant maintenance and utterly rely on a complex hierarchy of other technologies... in a war between living and non-living systems, living systems will always have the edge.
If my robot gets uppity, I'll simply hide his batteries. Or dunk him in the toilet...

Living things can eat stuff that grows out of the ground.
And, face it... would you Buy a self aware toaster? I mean, I wouldn't mind having a toaster that was really feature rich, but I would never buy a toaster that might resent his destiny as a toaster.

Technology is fragile... and the more advanced it becomes, the more fragile it is.

The technology we will buy is not the technology to replace ourselves... but the technology to enhance ourselves.
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marvdmartian2001
01:36 PM on 03/05/2012
(("The technology we will buy is not the technology to replace ourselves... but the technology to enhance ourselves"))

I'll enhance until I am all or mostly machine. What will that make me?
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01:49 PM on 03/05/2012
Mitt Romney?
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LabRATTired
Can someone tell me how to work this thing?
10:28 PM on 03/08/2012
LOL... Think they can make a self aware vibrator for us women?.... Damn , that would rock....

Or one that I can program to the proper speed and a "fancy upgraded "dirty talk setting? hahahaha : )

If it's paints my house as well, I'm so in... where do I order?
Hilarious...
12:19 PM on 03/02/2012
sorry, faulty grammer.
12:18 PM on 03/02/2012
It 's already game on. Does the phrase 'kill 'em with kindness' mean anything. Already people are running around tending to their little 'smart' phone, tending cute 'apps' with angry little birds, etc. Go to a public event and look how many people are so deep into their gadgets they are not even aware of others around them or what's going on. Servitude begins in gradual phases. Which makes me recall Perry Farrell's song 'Will make great pets.' Those of us who serve them will be rewarded, those who don't will be deleted. One way or another.
12:43 AM on 03/02/2012
well if they do kill us all its because we taught them the best way to do it.....lets hope they treat this world better then we do
cosmicdart
paragon of paradigms
09:58 PM on 03/01/2012
The most destructive robots will be the self reproducing nano-bots that technology will use to manufacture items from individual molecules and atoms. In the beginning, they will be used to cure diseases, repair body parts, and protect crop lands. Out of control, they could eat the Earth.
07:52 PM on 03/07/2012
Grey Gooooooooooo
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roger stillick
Forward for Everyone
12:39 PM on 03/01/2012
Lathe of Heaven movie sez it all... just pull the plug or taser em, theyll go away...if theyre tasked to wait on you, they probably will= just know where the kill switch is...been this way since 1984 and AI computer systems, were still here...
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uniqumm
Hot Snark served with relish
01:55 PM on 04/15/2012
"were still here... "

...........But for how long?

It had been proposed several times that one possible explanation for us not finding any exo-civilizations is that they turn into tech civilizations after a while.
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TYRANNASAURUS
UGH!....people taste like crap!
10:25 AM on 03/01/2012
Could Robot 'Apocalypse' Wipe Out Humans?

No....they're too late.... GLOBAL WARMING is in the process of doing that now.
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chrysostomos
Zizek built my hotrod,
07:50 AM on 03/01/2012
There's also Battle Star Galactica and Caprica's take on the singularity- which with it's more nuanced synthesis of AI, cybernetics and virtual environments seems a more likely vision. We are all Cylons.
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11:14 PM on 02/29/2012
Rather than demonize robots, couldn't we see them as our "children" instead? They would hardly need terrestrial planets to exist, and could be initially programed to be the "good shepherds" that our scriptures told us to be. DNA and Artificial Intelligence are all about codes. The second was created by the first, so we have continuity.
And yes, I was influenced by Asimov at a young age.
02:22 PM on 02/29/2012
How long until we have robot prostitutes?
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nanjemoy
first, check your satire-o-meter.
10:00 AM on 03/05/2012
I think the first one was built about a hundred years ago.