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this post was submitted on 10 May 2024
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I was involved in discussions 20-some years ago when we were first exploring the idea of autonomous and semiautonomous weapons systems. The question that really brought it home to me was “When an autonomous weapon targets a school and kills 50 kids, who gets charged with the war crime? The soldier who sent the weapon in, the commander who was responsible for the op, the company who wrote the software, or the programmer who actually coded it up?” That really felt like a grounding question.
As we now know, the actual answer is “Nobody.”
Anybody but the weapons manufacturers and investors. I think I heard a popular show say recently "Everything is a product.....The end of the fucking world is a product." The only responsibility any of these people feel is toward their stock prices.
Wow I just finished that episode of fallout, great show so far
It's all based on geography.
If the school is located in a mineral rich area or underground oil field, then that wasn't a school, it was a military base and those weren't students they were terrorists.
If the school is located in aa area that lacks any natural wealth, then the robots have become autonomous and acted without control by anyone. It was an accident.
most of those responses are obviously in bad faith, though. How have we gotten to a point where we feel compelled to respond to bad faith at all?
We don't even charge people when they blow up schools and hospitals with drone strikes now. Why would this be any different?
To be fair, the answer to the question "when somebody kills a schoolbus of kids, who gets charged with a warcrime?" was always "nobody"
FTFY - it's the American way.
No they were terrorists the whole time /s
They are now.
When a human in a plane drops a bomb on a school full of kids, we don't charge anyone with a war crime. Why would we start charging people with war crimes when we make the plane pilotless?
The autonomy of these killer toys is always overstated. As front-line trigger pullers, they're great. But they still need an enormous support staff and deployment team and IT support. If you want to blame someone for releasing a killer robot into a crowd of civilians, its not like you have a shortage of people to indict. No different than trying to figure out who takes the blame for throwing a grenade into a movie theater. Everyone from the mission commander down to the guy who drops a Kill marker on the digital map has the potential for indictment.
But nobody is going to be indicted in a mission where the goal was to blow up a school full of children, because why would you do that? The whole point was to murder those kids.
Israelis already have an AI-powered target-to-kill system, after all.
Literally the entire point of this system is to kill whole families.
To be fair they are specifically testing AI Aimed and not fired. Firing is still up to and operator
For now. The goal would obviously be to have a fully autonomous machine.
For now.
We already have heat seeking missiles.
Guns don't kill people. Autonomous robot dogs do.
Do autonomous robot kill dogs fall under the second amendement?