Swarm Robot Immune System? 47
schliz writes "Researchers are investigating large swarms of up to 10,000 miniature robots which can work together to form a single, artificial life form. A resulting artificial immune system is expected to be able to detect faults and make recommendations to a high-level control system about corrective action — much like how a person's natural immune system is able to cope with unfamiliar pathogens."
Don't they know they are unstoppable? (Score:5, Funny)
We have seen it in many things, and it won't end well.
Stargate Replicators,
Star Trek Borg,
hell even Lexx Mantrid arms!
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Robot AIDS
Re:Don't they know they are unstoppable? (Score:5, Interesting)
Although the parent post is quite cheesy the analogy is has a true core:
If you want to stop something flexible and adaptive the means has to be adaptive to.
That holds true for HIV and anti-AIDS medicine and it would hold true for a swarm of robots. You would either have to get them by one hit or take a swarm-like or a viral approach. Quite interesting task actually.
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I have no faith that the bright boys really know what they are doing.
Re:Don't they know they are unstoppable? (Score:4, Interesting)
That being said, you cannot rule out that it used to code for stuff, and that it is one mutation away from coming back into play (if you move around the 'start' and 'stop' within a genome, you can reintroduce what was previously 'junk' DNA). However, it is also likely that that DNA is no longer intact because it has not been evaluated for fitness recently (not being part of an individual means that individuals with 'bad' genes in this area can still effectively reproduce).
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The Invincible
(link [www.lem.pl])
(the Seventies are calling)
Besides, I am quite optimistic that mankind will present itself as an evolutionary failure in the long run (or as a component of a transient process, since failures are impossible if one shares the view that each and every process contributes to a current state of affairs).
CC.
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http://tinyurl.com/2baemk [tinyurl.com]
Re:Don't they know they are unstoppable? (Score:4, Insightful)
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Re:Don't they know they are unstoppable? (Score:5, Insightful)
Solving problems en mass is one thing, spontaneously developing the ability to replicate is completely another. Even if a snake robot swarm, unleashed into a collapsed building to find and help survivors, spontaneously decided to start replicating, where would it find the materials to do so? I'm pretty sure most collapsed buildings are short on snake robot parts.
This idea is related to Rodney Brooks [mit.edu] "Fast Cheap and Out of Control" idea. Instead of having one super expensive robot that symbolically processes the world around it and then interacts with it, you have thousands of fast, cheap and barely controlled robots that do the same task as one big by working together and each supplying one small piece of functionality such as sensing, moving or manipulating. Nothing about this implies that they will suddenly begin to replicate.
If, at some point in the future, we develop the ability build robots that can use raw materials to create more of themselves, unleashing thousands of them with no direct control mechanism would probably be a bad idea. Until then, there's not much to worry about unless you work for FOX news and need a SCARY and SENSATIONAL headline for the hour.
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We don't have reason to worry about robots taking over the world until then, yes. But the intermediate ground is that research in this area is only rarely go
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Indeed, a more open and involved d
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I read that book in 3 days and just couldn't put it down until the end.
Skynet...obligatory (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Skynet...obligatory (Score:5, Funny)
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We need a lot of bullets and a high speed gun to beat them.
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I bet they run... (Score:2, Informative)
And this is different (Score:3, Insightful)
Battle Bots.... (Score:3, Interesting)
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You don't need the actual robots to do that. Just the software.
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Norton Antivirus Robot (Score:2, Funny)
Storm worm? (Score:1)
Storm (Score:1)
I *genuinely* misread that... (Score:1)
This is how it starts? (Score:1)
10 000 of them?! (Score:1)
Immune System (Score:2)
When encountering an unfamiliar pathogen, human immune system will most likely fail to do anything useful (but sometimes manages to do something harmful) while the owner will keel over and die. This has been shown time and again during the history of the world. So if you want to make something adaptible, that's the last thing you want to take the model from.
Of course human populations adapt, so I guess this could work, if the robot swarm was able to reproduce and mutate - but that has some rather obvious
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Certainly. I have also read history, and know what happened when Europeans came to America, for example: the same thing which happened every time two groups, one of which had infectious diseases the other didn't, met.