Very bizzare.
Child robots could be used to treat pedophiles and other ***ual predators
Robotic experts say child-like machines could become ‘most powerful tool’ in reducing *** attacks. Animal and disabled robots could also cater to ‘dark desires.’
BY Deborah Hastings
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Published: Friday, July 18, 2014, 3:00 PM
Updated: Friday, July 18, 2014, 3:00 PM
Robots in the form of children could be used by pedophiles and other ***ual offenders to keep them from attacking humans, say experts.
Well, here’s an idea that’s destined for lengthy, heated debate:
Treat pedophiles and other ***ual deviants by building robots that would quench their illegal desires.
“Child-like robots could be used for pedophiles the way methadone is used to treat drug addicts,” said Ron Arkin, Georgia Tech’s Mobile Robot Lab director, according to Forbes.
At a recent robot ethics seminar at the University of California at Berkeley, experts debated moral and ethical concerns in the rising development of artificial intelligence.
Including the use of child robots as *** toys.
“We’ve had *** toys for as long as mankind, and womankind, have been around,” Arkin told the group.
Arkin said he didn’t advocate selling child-size robots as ***ual aids, but rather as something to be used in research settings.
“I only believe it is worth investigating in a controlled way to possibly provide better protection to society from recidivism in *** offenders,” he told Forbes.
“If we can save some children, I think it’s a worthwhile project.”
Other experts, including Ben Way, author of "Jobocalypse: The End of Human Jobs and How Robots Will Replace Them," have suggested robots in the shape of animals and disabled people could be sold to practicers of bestiality and those with fetishes and "dark desires."
Using robots for *** has been bandied about in recent years as robotic technology grew at a rapid pace.
A survey this spring in Britain revealed that one in six people would have *** with a robot.
There already are myriad sellers of *** robots on the Internet, offering male and female versions with life-like genitalia and battery-powered limbs.
“We’re poised at the cusp of really being surrounded by robots in daily life,” said law professor Jennifer Urban, who moderated last week’s panel discussion.
All the more reason to discuss the legal, moral and ethical consequences of using artificial intelligence, she said.
Child robots could be used to treat pedophiles and other ***ual predators
Robotic experts say child-like machines could become ‘most powerful tool’ in reducing *** attacks. Animal and disabled robots could also cater to ‘dark desires.’
BY Deborah Hastings
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Published: Friday, July 18, 2014, 3:00 PM
Updated: Friday, July 18, 2014, 3:00 PM
Robots in the form of children could be used by pedophiles and other ***ual offenders to keep them from attacking humans, say experts.
Well, here’s an idea that’s destined for lengthy, heated debate:
Treat pedophiles and other ***ual deviants by building robots that would quench their illegal desires.
“Child-like robots could be used for pedophiles the way methadone is used to treat drug addicts,” said Ron Arkin, Georgia Tech’s Mobile Robot Lab director, according to Forbes.
At a recent robot ethics seminar at the University of California at Berkeley, experts debated moral and ethical concerns in the rising development of artificial intelligence.
Including the use of child robots as *** toys.
“We’ve had *** toys for as long as mankind, and womankind, have been around,” Arkin told the group.
Arkin said he didn’t advocate selling child-size robots as ***ual aids, but rather as something to be used in research settings.
“I only believe it is worth investigating in a controlled way to possibly provide better protection to society from recidivism in *** offenders,” he told Forbes.
“If we can save some children, I think it’s a worthwhile project.”
Other experts, including Ben Way, author of "Jobocalypse: The End of Human Jobs and How Robots Will Replace Them," have suggested robots in the shape of animals and disabled people could be sold to practicers of bestiality and those with fetishes and "dark desires."
Using robots for *** has been bandied about in recent years as robotic technology grew at a rapid pace.
A survey this spring in Britain revealed that one in six people would have *** with a robot.
There already are myriad sellers of *** robots on the Internet, offering male and female versions with life-like genitalia and battery-powered limbs.
“We’re poised at the cusp of really being surrounded by robots in daily life,” said law professor Jennifer Urban, who moderated last week’s panel discussion.
All the more reason to discuss the legal, moral and ethical consequences of using artificial intelligence, she said.
Comment