India To Develop Military Robots For Warfare 169
WoodenKnight writes "Indian DRDO chief Avinash Chander has told reporters that development of robotic soldiers would be one of his 'priority thrust areas', saying that 'unmanned warfare in land and air is the future of warfare.' He foresees robotic soldiers assisting human soldiers initially but, he hinted at forward-position deployment of such robots. He gave a timeline of at least a decade for the project to see any practical use but said a number of labs in India are now working on this."
seems a bit specialized for the current state (Score:4, Insightful)
If you have well-developed robotics expertise already, you're in a much better position to develop more specialized robots, like robot soldiers. India doesn't really: both its robotics industry and its research are relatively small sectors at the moment, far behind the state of the art in countries like Japan, China, Germany, South Korea, or the USA. They're going to have to fix that before robot soldiers are going to emerge out of it.
Of course, this might just be a way of selling robotics funding, so maybe that's the goal.
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How to get good at something: Try doing it.
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Yes, but in this case the useful "it" to try doing is "robotics". Attaching weapons to them is something that's useful to do once you have the basics down.
Re:seems a bit specialized for the current state (Score:5, Insightful)
On the other hand, if you are trying to get funding for basic research approved, attaching weapons to your grant proposal can be very helpful indeed...
Since actually getting a robot to kill somebody(in a manner more sophisticated than a land mine) requires all sorts of other capabilities to be worked out first, you can just write "Killer Robots OMG National Security" on your application and then spend a decade doing the basic research you actually wanted to do anyway.
Re:seems a bit specialized for the current state (Score:5, Insightful)
Robots killing people is fairly easy, simple motion activated systems combined with range finding and ballistics algorithms will do the trick. Add facial/body type/gait recognition to keep it from going after so many shadows.
Getting them to do that while also not killing the right people is the hard part.
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Automated fire control, with either the assumption that all targets are valid targets or with a human Yes/No step is indeed the (relatively) easy part. If you want the robot to be anything but a static turret, ideally plugged in to the electrical grid, you fall into the morass of hard robotics problems once again.
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Seriously,
I'm sure some of those robot gladiators wouldn't be too pleasant to run into in a dark ally.
1. Create chassis w wheels.
2. Mount weapons.
3. ??? Develop AI. or... use a remote control.
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> Getting them to do that while also not killing the right people is the hard part.
Advantage: Bad guys.
Thank god these aren't the kind who go into politics.
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Robots killing people is fairly easy, simple motion activated systems combined with range finding and ballistics algorithms will do the trick. Add facial/body type/gait recognition to keep it from going after so many shadows.
Getting them to do that while also not killing the right people is the hard part.
That's not the hard part, actually. The hard part is getting them to do all that more cost effectively than a human soldier. If an automated robotic killing machine doesn't do a better job than the same cost in the number of humans, you're going to have a hard time convincing anybody to buy more than one to play with.
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It really depends how indiscriminate you are. A robot that just shoots at any moving IR target isn't particularly complex but as long as you point it at no-man's land it can be quite effective.
Don't underestimate Indian weapons tech. They already have some pretty high end stuff like the fastest cruise missiles in the world, for which no-one has any realistic defence yet. A drone that attacks anything moving in a designated kill-zone could be assembled out of existing technology and some glue.
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And I quote:
He said many new technologies have to be developed such as "miniature communication, materials, cognitive technologies, self-learning processes and interaction with human."
All in the span of a decade... they have no idea.
Maybe this project can serve as a funding guise for stabilizing their electrical grid, can't imagine it could take the toll of charging a robot army, much less powering a space heater at present.
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Whether they use existing technology or not, cognitive abilities, and self-learning (AI) have been tried and side-lined by far more developed countries.
If they create a robot army in 5 years... my money's on it'd get picked apart by the most basic of current drone technology.
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Note: Drones are robots. Perhaps everyone is imagining 3 Laws humanoids.
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Indian teams always do shitty in international robotics competitions, but not for lack of effort or talent. Their shoe string budgets are usually propped up by ingenuity & hard work where a significant portion of their labor ends up invested in DIY shit which better capitalized teams were able to just buy CoTs. It will be interesting to see if government financing of the field will end up in their hands or if it will be plundered by corruption.
If the faculty supervising the team exercises authority to b
Robots... (Score:4, Funny)
Will the robots be able to handle their own tech support should they have an issue?
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Nope. It'll be an Indian call center.
I imagine the call drop-off statistics will be quite high at the "please try rebooting" step of the script.
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Vicious, Independent, Replicating, Unswerving, Sacrificial robots.
I think we need a special word for them...
hmmm .... VIRUS robots
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How about ABC Warriors [wikipedia.org]? Why would you need more than The Mek-nificent Seven.
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Nah, that would be outsourced to... no wait...
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thank you, come again
Inevitable... (Score:5, Funny)
"Hello, this is Fred who-is-definitely-not-from-Hyderabad, thank you for calling killbot technical support, how can I help you today?"
"Hi Fred, I'm afraid my killbot has been refusing all targeting instructions and attempting to kill me."
"Ah, let me check with my supervisor, one moment please."
"Thank you for your patience. Please try turning it off and never turning it on again."
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"We have communicated to the vendor, and there needs to being a patch to OS, and being an update to the number three logic board. We will be doing that now.
"Wait, we need to do updates after hours..."
"I am reminding you that it is after hours."
"It's after hours *there*. It's still ten in the morning here! Wait, the lights on the robot have gone out."
(a long time later)
"We are very sorry to be reporting that the logic board has failed after the update. The vendor has been contacted. We are expect the re
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Also Indian here. Relax. They all know that... at least on this site.
I for one am looking for some original, good-natured call center jokes in a robot apocalypse.
We can do Japanese Mecha jokes or Foxconn robot jokes next week.
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Number Johnny Five, stop trying to alienate our vast US customer base!
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American here.
They're called 'stereotypes' because the majority fit a given description.
Live with it or go home.
American here. Bullshit. Thanks for playing.
Gundams (Score:1)
India? Robots in the front line? (Score:4, Interesting)
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The fact that the US is one of the few countries to start foreign wars in the past decade, and that the president responsible got re-elected makes me doubt that. Hell, even in a bunch countries just supporting the US in Iraq and Afghanistan the political fallout was bigger. Not sure about India though.
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What a Simple World You Live In (Score:2, Informative)
The fact that the US is one of the few countries to start foreign wars in the past decade,
The only one foreign war that the USA has started since the Cold War is the 2nd Gulf War. Every other war has been legitimate (the war in Afghanistan), the invasion of Panama (which even the majority of Panamanians welcomed it), UN sanctioned to prevent genocide (as in the Balkans) or ill-prepared, ill-advise attempts to provide support to desperately needed UN-sanctioned peacekeeping/humanitarian work (the Somali War and the "Black Hawk Down" incident.).
and that the president responsible got re-elected makes me doubt that.
Junior (that's how I call Bush Jr.) got re-elected on
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Yes, because Afghanistan is in the US? I love the meaning you give to the word 'foreign' :). With the whole 'Prism is not a big deal, we just spy on the rest of the world' stuff, I guess you are not the only one using that meaning. However, I stated nothing about things being legitimate or not.
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Yes, because Afghanistan is in the US? I love the meaning you give to the word 'foreign' :).
Well, what other meaning could you possibly attach to it given the context of the conversation?. The focus is on the US. Ergo, that is the context, ergo the word "foreign" from the geographical context of the US.
If you are referring to a different meaning, please share your corrected, more accurate meaning so as to understand what the hell you are referring to (with examples of the other "foreign" wars initiated by the US since the end of the Cold War, thanks.)
With the whole 'Prism is not a big deal, we just spy on the rest of the world' stuff, I guess you are not the only one using that meaning.
I have no clue about what you are guessing, b
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I had a bit of a stressful day yesterday and I feel like I over-responded to your message and I do apologize for that. I guess we can see eachothers points and take it as they are.
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Your reading comprehension sucks. His point was that we didn't start the war in Afghanistan, not that Afghanistan wasn't a foreign country. The argument is that 9/11 was effectively started by Afghanistan that supported the terror network that launched the attack.
Not that I agree/disagree with any other points either of you made.
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The Iraq-Kuwait War was in 1990, The eviction of Iraq from Kuwait was accomplished by a broad intenational coalition [wikipedia.org], the so-called second Gulf War was really a continuation of the first gulf war, but even giving you that one this past decade; I'm wondering about your plural wars. Could you be confusing the NATO action in Lybia with an American war?
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No, when there is no political cost to body bags, you develop a strategy similar to China's Korean war strategy. Send waves of unarmed soldiers towards the enemy until the enemy runs out of bullets, then send in the soldiers with bullets. That's a zero political cost for body bags offensive. India has never done that. But they could, with robots!
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A killer robot costs way more than a human soldier, and is much harder to replace.
It will be very interesting when this comes into the equation. Are these really to protect the soldiers?
Who will end up protecting whom, and who is more 'expendable'?
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Speaking of posturing, I'm not sure if replacing these bunch with robots would have quite the same impact: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dMbH_6tryiw#t=2m07s [youtube.com]
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Please see their first prototype here: http://youtu.be/7yBnl_krN_U?t=1m17s [youtu.be]
It is formidable.
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instead of supplying terrorists with cheap AK-47s.
There you have it, the "cheapest robot possible" TM. Simply program someone to think that their way of life, freedom, lands, traditions, religion is being threatened by something else (the broader and more abstract the better) and you have a pretty cheap killing machine which doesn't need any nuclear power plant to move around but an AK47, some bullets and some rice.
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India wants to be taken seriously as a major military force. They actually have some very advanced weapons, including the fastest cruise missiles in the world and modern, high end fighter aircraft. Built with Russian help, but still...
They also want to export that stuff to other countries for profit.
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Agreed. Anyone with experience with an Indian call center might think that if their military is anything like this, perhaps robots (even primitive ones) might do a better job. The thing is, I've worked with the Indian military, and I found them smart, well trained and well motivated. So I don't understand this at all.
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Robots can move into situations where fear would stop most humans or distract them.
If you need to troll for contact and observe an area, robots can be quite useful. They can, for example, approach armored fighting vehicles "unafraid" and kill them.
It's an old idea:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=syuu_g7svoE [youtube.com]
Makes me want to say... (Score:1)
Those who ignore science fiction ... (Score:5, Funny)
..are doomed to repeat it.
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They/We already do that with history, despite similar warnings being given frequently and extensively. History is given much better lip-service than science fiction, so why should science fiction fare any better?
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Except for that Fiction element.
Science fiction tends to have that one little thing that makes the robots go off their programming, without a Safe Default mode. You know to make it a good story, that people will want to read.
No one wants to hear about the little boy who got killed for crossing a zone labeled you will be shot if entered, because he crossed the area. Or in case of a major malfunction where they will not power down. You just kinda shoot them down from the air, or just send in a new batch ba
The way I see it going down... (Score:2)
When wars ultimately get to robots fighting each other, the most common sense approach to countering that type of engagement is to attack the people controlling them.
India is heavily dependent on wireless communications as their land-line infrastructure is very poor. So it would make sense to decentralize their command centers and instead rely on ad-hoc wireless networks to distribute instructions. Then people will be targeting enemy combatants that are literally sitting in their living rooms in the midst o
You're not the only one (Score:2)
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You can't target communications networks as it's wireless with no central point of attack.
Your experience with the robustness of wifi is very different from mine. I have enough wifi problems without military communication jammers making it even worse.
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> You can't target communications networks as it's wireless with no central point of attack.
EMP. Done. (Did you fall asleep before the end of The Avengers?)
Reality TV (Score:4, Funny)
Ok so this will likely lead to robot vs robot warfare with no real human casualties... So, I say we put that shit on TV and enjoy :) /joke /sarcasm
Nah, I don't see any way for this to escalate badly
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I wish I didn't have to put tags for people who don't get humour.
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Ok so this will likely lead to robot vs robot warfare with no real human casualties... So, I say we put that shit on TV and enjoy :) /joke
Why the joke? In WWII people bought war bonds. In WWIII you'll crowdfund armies and those who contribute more will get the chance to lead them into battle. Those who contribute a smaller fee will get full access to the robot statistics on real time!
Wow, I gotta go get my lawyer and patent this shit.
Ban it before it gets out of hand! (Score:2)
We need to get an International treaty in place against these kinds of weapons before everyone has their own.
Re:Ban it before it gets out of hand! (Score:4, Insightful)
...so only those that abide by the treaty won't have them.
Like it or not, this is the future.
A Killer Robot in Every Home (Score:2)
how many hungry in India? (Score:2, Insightful)
Just sayin'..
We have the same problem in the U.S....
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Just sayin'..
We have the same problem in the U.S....
"No country is so poor or so backward that it can't afford the most modern weapons technology". Can't remember who said it, but ...
31 Posts In... (Score:2)
human is cheaper (Score:2)
too close to the US (Score:1)
Three Simpsons ref's so far (Score:2)
Jeez slashdot, three Simpsons references so far and no one's mentioned:
The wars of the future will not be fought on the battlefield or at sea. They will be fought in space, or possibly on top of a very tall mountain. In either case, most of the actual fighting will be done by small robots. And as you go forth today remember always your duty is clear: To build and maintain those robots. Thank you.
Easier route to escalation (Score:5, Insightful)
Enthiran (Score:2, Interesting)
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The robot "Chitti" in the 2010 Indian blockbuster movie Enthiran [wikipedia.org] was originally intended for army service.
Here is the future:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7yBnl_krN_U [youtube.com]
Poor Path (Score:2)
As much as I love robotics I just can't see how the leaders in India could exist with the guilt of spending the sums involved in building a modern military. Too much poverty, suffering and need to go down this road. Maybe building useful robots for export in order to raise funds to help the suffering would be a better goal. What would Ghandi have done?
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It's COMPLETE nonsense (Score:4, Insightful)
...honestly, not even worth reporting.
1) India has trouble building tanks, airplanes, ships, and subs...far more 'pedestrian' tools of warfare. Their programs are bloated and rife with corruption, delays, technical failures, overpromises, etc. such that they are only capable of producing inferior equipment at ridiculous costs.
2) India is the second most populous country in the world. If there's anything they DON'T need it's to replace the dirt-cheap organic, self-replicating, minimally-functional dubious cannon fodder they currently have with hideously expensive, fragile, dubious cannon fodder made out of plastic and metal that they don't have and likely will never be able to build for the foreseeable future.
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Like...?
What? No obligatory? (Score:1)
Johnny 5 is ALIVE!!!
India Battlebots - Bribery (Score:1)
Relax... (Score:2)
The robot soldier idea is a non-starter vanity project, like the $10 tablet, auto-mobiles powered by water and air and so on. No need to worry. But like Russel Peter's would say, playing with these robots 'someone is going to get hurt real bad'.
I'm terrified! (Score:2)
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An Adi Parashakti bot done right would be hot
ED-209? (Score:2)
And in a related announcement... (Score:1)
Pakistan has said that they plan to clone Jar Jar Binks.
H1Bots (Score:1)
nuf sed :-)
Yeah, yeah. (Score:1)
I mean, as an Indian I am really worried that off the cuff pronouncements with no real basis in facts and figures, or budget will soon become policy.
AFAIK, this gentleman (Mr. Avinash Chandar) is the new appointed chief of the DRDO. (Defense Research and Development Organisation) and this piece is from an interview hye gave when he took over.
This is not say that the DRDO h
Indians are morally corrupt by birth (Score:1)
Indians are morally corrupt by birth (Caste system) for the past 3000 years.
Google "Companies ruined or almost ruined by forward caste"
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hey maybe India could use this tech to deploy toilets... http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-india-17377895 [bbc.co.uk]
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And instead plunged billions into the toilet marked "robots on the front line". Because, to a great extent, it's the process that's the problem, not necessarily the product.
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Forward-thinking is one thing, capability is another. I doubt that India is capable of achieving the "dream" they are having. They can't even feed and/or solve their own population poverty, how could they be able to afford a huge budget on something that may (yes may) do good for their country.
What I can see is only a corruption rather than a real plan for their country. Why? Because the disappearing fund could be included in failing missions and there will likely be plenty of failures in their attempts wit
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The wars of the future will not be fought on the battlefield or at sea. They will be fought in space, or possibly on top of a very tall mountain. In either case, most of the actual fighting will be done by small robots. And as you go forth today remember always your duty is clear: To build and maintain those robots.
Re: Oblig (Score:5, Insightful)
The US shares a border with it's biggest enemy. In fact, the US and it's biggest enemy are on the same side of the border.
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Democrats?
I kid, I kid
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Canada? Polar bear Mounties terrify me.
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Re:Metal Gear (Score:4, Interesting)
I disagree. IMHO war has generally been about egos, and resources are frequently the excuse. Assuming we managed to come up with efficient and logical machines, they would most likely come up with some more efficient way to get their resources than war.
However if they were to decide that war was the most efficient way, watch out!
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War is an *expensive* way to acquire resources, but often people don't care because they can arrange for *other* people to sacrifice their wealth and/or their lives.
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The Romans waged war to gather slaves and wealth. Spain built an empire from its lust for gold and territory. Hitler shaped a battered Germany into an economic superpower.
But war never changes.
In the 21st century, war was still waged over the resources that could be acquired. Only this time, the spoils of war were also its weapons: Petroleum and Uranium. For these resources, China would invade Alaska, the US would annex Canada, and the European Commonwealth would dissolve int
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Keep in mind that according to its actions, the US aspires to the same status - except substitute "won't" for "can't", at least in the short-medium term. In the long term those policies will make it "can't", too.,
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You didn't mention the open sewers in the streets, and that more toilets are needed.