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The Safe Performance of Robots: A Matter of Law Print E-mail
Written by Raúl Arrabales Moreno   
Saturday, 05 May 2007

Image  It seems that some governments are taking very seriously the possibility of the everyday use of robots in society. Japan and South Korea are worried about human safety in a world where many critical tasks can be performed by machines. They share the Issac Asimov’s vision of a future world where human beings and robots coexist. However, they don’t seem to trust mechanical creatures controlled by only three simple laws.

 As reported by The Times a few weeks ago, Japanese robotics experts assure that the famous Three Laws are not enough to keep us safe when the next generation robots become a reality. A 60 page draft document titled ‘Guidelines to Secure the Safe Performance of Next Generation Robots’ is being discussed by the industry, researchers, and lawyers with the aim to elaborate a law that protect us effectively.

This draft document proposes the creation of a central database where all incidents of human harmed by robots will be recorded and accessible by robot manufacturers. Therefore, robots must be equipped with the corresponding mechanisms to log and communicate any injures they cause to people during their task accomplishment. Japan is envisioning a near future where robots play a key role in society and they have detected the need for a well-built regulation. It is foreseen that the domestic robot market grow in Japan up to more than 3.3 trillion yen in the next 15 years. Assistant robots able to help and chat with pensioners are already a reality. Nursing robots, security patrol robots, home assistant robots are going to be common in the coming years.

South Korea is also working in an ethical code for robots. The designed committee is to establish a code of conduct for the life of intelligent robots. The Asimov’s Three Laws are also seen insufficient by South Korea. Identifying robot units, preventing their illegal use, and assuring data privacy are other aspects that need to be taken into account.

It seems that the dawn of the age of robots is coming as predicted by Bill Gates [1], however it shouldn’t be seen as a dangerous or problematic issue as it won’t be as shocking and fast as predicted. In fact, it is already happening for many years. Don’t you think so? Look at these figures:

- Year 2000: 742.500 Robots Worldwide (Japan 402.200; USA 92.900; Spain 10.500) [2].
- Year 2003: 1.400.000 Robots Worldwide (BBC News).
- Year 2004: 1.500.000 Robots Worldwide. [3]
- Forecast for 2006-2009:
It is projected that sales of all types of domestic robots (vacuum cleaning, lawn-mowing, window cleaning and other types) in the period 2006-2009 could reach some 3.9 million units.
The market for entertainment and leisure robots, which includes toy robots, is forecast at about 1.6 million units, most of which, of course, are very low cost. [4].

[1] http://www.conscious-robots.com/en/reviews/robots/a-robot-in-every-home.html 
[2] UNITED NATIONS ECONOMIC COMMISSION FOR EUROPE. UN/ECE News.
[3] UN/ECE. Press release ECE/STAT/03/P03
[4] www.ifr.org


 


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  Comments (9)
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 1 Laws of Robotics
Written by This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it website, on 10-07-2007 09:59
Law Zero has the highest priority, then Law One and so forth. Law Two has less priority than Law One. 
Therefore, a robot will not murder if someone told it to, because that would violate a higher order law (Law One in this case).
 2 Written by This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it , on 09-07-2007 21:39
For the version of the four laws as you wrote them, I think that you have the order reversed. The way you have it, a robot could murder if someone told it to.
 3 Safe set of laws?
Written by This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it website, on 09-05-2007 23:04
That sounds scaring :eek  
This makes me think how safe is this set of laws. In the beginning the original three laws were enough, then roboticists added some more, like the example above.. But, are we still missing something??? Are there any flaws in the definition of the laws? Anyway, I think we will need robot psychologists.. (like Dr. Susan Calvin (Bridget Moynahan) in the movie 'I, Robot').
 4 Written by JoSeK, on 09-05-2007 22:14
The Procreation Law is very, very important. Just for the Cylons... :grin
 5 Extended Set of the Laws of Robotics
Written by This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it website, on 08-05-2007 11:30
I've found more proposals for extending the set of Laws [1]. However, as JoSeK says, I think the problem is in the effective implementation of the laws.. 
 
The Meta-Law 
A robot may not act unless its actions are subject to the Laws of Robotics  
 
The Procreation Law 
A robot may not take any part in the design or manufacture of a robot unless the new robot's actions are subject to the Laws of Robotics  
 
[1]http://www.anu.edu.au/people/Roger.Clarke/SOS/Asimov.html
 6 Asimov's Laws of Robotics
Written by This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it website, on 08-05-2007 10:17
Thanks, so to summarize the three (now four) laws: 
 
Law Zero 
A robot may not injure humanity, or, through inaction, allow humanity to come to harm. 
 
Law One 
A robot may not injure a human being, or, through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm, unless this would violate a higher-order Law. 
 
Law Two 
(a) A robot must obey orders given it by human beings, except where such orders would conflict with a higher-order Law. 
 
(b) A robot must obey orders given it by superordinate robots, except where such orders would conflict with a higher-order Law. 
 
Law Three 
(a) A robot must protect the existence of a superordinate robot as long as such protection does not conflict with a higher-order Law. 
 
(b) A robot must protect its own existence as long as such protection does not conflict with a higher-order Law. 
 
Law Four 
A robot must perform the duties for which it has been programmed, except where that would conflict with a higher-order law.
 7 Written by This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it website, on 07-05-2007 21:34
Yes: "A robot may not harm humanity, or, by inaction, allow humanity to come to harm". The Zeroth law was added later than the three originals by Asimov's who also modified the three original laws in order to acknowledge this.
 8 Written by rambot, on 07-05-2007 14:49
Is there a Zero Law?
 9 Written by This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it website, on 05-05-2007 18:35
It seems amazing to me any country trying to control an area like this which is far from being part of our daily lives ¿is all of this part of the effect of science fiction films/tv shows like Matrix or Galactiva? The real problems are quite far from now, ¿what is going to happen when the robots could act like real humans?  
 
I think Asimov's robotic laws are quite good (4 laws after the introduction of the zero law), but ¿how can they be implemented?

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