Pentagon Drafts Kids To Build Drones and Robots 173
MrSeb writes "In a world where warfare is fast becoming fielded by remote controlled and autonomous robots, innovation is the key to victory. The most technologically advanced superpower can see more, plan better, and attack from further away than its inferior adversaries. What better way to revolutionize the drone and robotics industry than use the brilliant minds of our children? That's what DARPA and the Defense Department's research and development arm thinks, anyway. The Manufacturing Experimentation and Outreach Initiative, part of the Adaptive Vehicle Make project, is slated to reach a thousand schools in and out of the country, roping in the brightest minds to develop robotics and advance technology in new and interesting ways. Funded by the Department of Defense, the program comes with a steep cost: The DoD wants unlimited rights to everything the students build. It sounds almost like something Orson Scott Card would dream up."
Too much Hollywood for you?? (Score:2, Insightful)
"In a world where warfare is fast becoming fielded by remote controlled and autonomous robots..."
You've been watching way too many sci fi movies to make that statement.
Besides that US, I don't think any other country has the kind of robotic arsenal you're dreaming of.
Re:Too much Hollywood for you?? (Score:5, Informative)
See: Remote Control War [imdb.com], available on Netflix watch it now. It may not be the robotic arsenal _you_ are dreaming of, it's a different one, and probably bigger and more capable than you imagine.
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http://theaviationist.com/2012/01/20/neuron-roll-out/ [theaviationist.com] the europeans disagree with you
The U.S. government is EXTREMELY corrupt. (Score:5, Insightful)
By some measures, the U.S. government is the most violent government that has ever existed. The U.S. government has 6 times the percentage of citizens in prison as European countries. The U.S. government has invaded or bombed or interfered destructively with 27 countries since the end of the 2nd world war. The U.S. government killed more people in Iraq than Saddam Hussein. The U.S. government believes it can torture or kill anyone at any time. The U.S. government can require executives of U.S. companies to take actions without disclosing what was done.
In comparison, taking intellectual property while giving little in return is a smaller crime, but it is a crime.
In what other country would Newt Gingrich or George W. Bush be considered a serious candidate for public office? They are or were candidates only because they deliver corruption.
All of that destructiveness will soon become much worse. The U.S. government is trying to arrange a war with Iran. That will benefit people like the Bush family who have investments in companies that profit from war. It will benefit Israelis who want U.S. taxpayers to pay for Israel's security. It will hurt U.S. taxpayers who will discover that their money will lose value even faster than before.
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"The U.S. government has 6 times the percentage of citizens in prison as European countries."
That doesn't make the government violent.
The US is diverse and that has both very good and very bad aspects. The only way to control crime is to lock up lots of repeat offenders and throw away the key.
Europe has Europeans, and while immigration will gradually erode its cultures Europe isn't nearly as infested with humans from failed cultures as the US.
Slavery ensured the US would remain a violent country for centuri
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The only way to control crime is to lock up lots of repeat offenders and throw away the key.
Not necessarily, if you make less things illegal, by definition, crime goes down. We could lower our crime rate incredibly simply by ending the failed drug war. Unfortunately we have allowed prisons to become a private enterprise who lobby hard to keep business booming.
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Of course we did. Where else is there a ready supply of dirt cheap labor inside the US? They can't unionise or go on strike, OSHA doesn't go 'inside', and the private prisons charge them room and board just like the old West Virginia coal t
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Your nom de plume is very apropos! The fact that we have the largest prison population has NOTHING to do with population diversity! It has everything to do with an out of control legal system and a judiciary that is corrupt, capricious, arbitrary, highly political and completely out of touch! As long as the vast majority of elected "lawmakers" are attorneys we will continue to accrue new legal structures and redundant laws without the elimination of anachronism while continually pandering to the "Law
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So my kid's Lego Robotics club at elementary school is just a pre-enlistment test?
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And besides the US, most countries involved in wars are either fighting the US, or supported by the US, or fighting countries supported by the US. That's why remote-controlled drones are now involved in practically every conflict.
Autonomous robots is something else, though. I recall South Korea has some fully automatic machine gun sentries, but other than that most people understandably aren't big on the idea of letting software autonomously decide to kill - not even because of Skynet, but because most soft
Re:Too much Hollywood for you?? (Score:5, Interesting)
"Besides that US, I don't think any other country has the kind of robotic arsenal you're dreaming of."
The US spends almost as much each year on the military as the entire rest of the world combined. It's hard to even count how many conflicts we're currently involved in. We're the trendsetters. And robotic warfare is the trend we're setting.
The U.S. spends 5% of GDP on military endeavors, down from 10% 50 years ago. Perhaps still too much, but less than a lot of countries.
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According to this page:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_military_expenditures [wikipedia.org]
the US outspends everyone on a GDP basis except Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Jordan, Iraq, Oman, Israel, Eritrea, and Chad.
And on an actual dollar basis, the difference is truly staggering.
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According to this page:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_military_expenditures [wikipedia.org]
the US outspends everyone on a GDP basis except Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Jordan, Iraq, Oman, Israel, Eritrea, and Chad.
And on an actual dollar basis, the difference is truly staggering.
According to this page [wikipedia.org], a big part of that U.S. military spending can be attributed to the fact that we pay our soldiers, rather than conscript them.
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Conscription != no pay.
Further, this page:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_budget_of_the_United_States [wikipedia.org]
shows clearly that of $680 billion in US military spending, $525 billion of it has nothing to do with salaries.
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"Besides that US, I don't think any other country has the kind of robotic arsenal you're dreaming of."
The US spends almost as much each year on the military as the entire rest of the world combined. It's hard to even count how many conflicts we're currently involved in. We're the trendsetters. And robotic warfare is the trend we're setting.
The U.S. spends 5% of GDP on military endeavors, down from 10% 50 years ago. Perhaps still too much, but less than a lot of countries.
Your using percentage of GDP to make it seem like the US spends hardly anything on the military. That is, at best, misleading. Half of our national budget goes to the military.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_military_expenditures [wikipedia.org]
The US military budget exceeds the rest of the world's combined military budget by $200 billion. Our military budget represents about 43% of world military spending. We spend 586% more than China, which is second place (our budget is about $700 billion, theirs is a
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Half of our national budget goes to the military.
That's so wrong it's not even wrong.
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Yeah. That's so wrong you don't even have to give facts to back up your assertion.
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Eh? Ok. Here some quick numbers from the GOA for 2010:
Total tax receipts: $2.162 trillion
Total military expenditures 2010: $1.2 trillion
You can't just look at the dollars going to the defense department. That is just a fraction of overall military expenditures.
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The US military budget exceeds the rest of the world's combined military budget by $200 billion. Our military budget represents about 43% of world military spending.
I'm, not disagreeing with your basic point, but the above two statements are mutually exclusive.
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Oops. Was looking at two different charts. I should really get caffeine into my system before posting. :P
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It costs big bucks to be the 'World Police'. Strange thing is, I can't remember anyone (other
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While I agree with your sentiment (war is good for profit), Kuwait didn't bend over for Saddam. Saddam (who we supported and put in power) was planning to invade Kuwait. The US initial gave it's typical "turn a blind eye" response since he was our puppet in the area. But when Kuwait was invaded and there was a world-wide outcry, the US was pretty much cornered into taking action.
We aren't the world police. We've just caused so many messes across the world that it just seems like we are the world police.
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I have a copy of How to Lie with Maps somewhere.
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Someone's been reading "How to Lie with Statistics"!
It's not a lie, in the 1960s, 10% of US GDP went out on military spending, in 2007, it was less than 5%, I'd call that progress regardless of whether or not I think the number should be more like 2% in today's world.
By the way, drones are helping to push that spending number down without creating the political instability that would result from a massive US military shutdown.
Re:Too much Hollywood for you?? (Score:5, Insightful)
Not at all shocking. (Score:3, Interesting)
The DoD wants unlimited rights to everything the students build.
Just like Apple wants rights to the e-books made with their ebook software,
Or how Corporations want the rights to whatever you create, on or off the clock.
How many of you remember the old days when DARPA made a CAD package with tax dollars and felt the citizens should have full access to that source code?
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Just like Apple wants rights to the e-books made with their ebook software
Apple doesn't want the rights to the ebooks made with iBook Author - all they say is any book made with their software, which they provide for free, can only be distributed ,in Apple's iBook format created by the software, by them. The author owns the content and can do whatever else they want with it, just not with Apple's software.
While I would like Apple to release a version of iBook Author that created a standard ePub formatted file that could be used on other devices, and I would pay for such softwa
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"Apple doesn't want the rights to the ebooks made with iBook Author - all they say is any book made with their software, which they provide for free, can only be distributed ,in Apple's iBook format created by the software, by them."
Sorry, but all you do is to prove the OP's point: the copyright grants the author the right to distribute his work as he sees fits - and Apple wants this right for themselves for ebooks made with iBook Author. Q.E.D.
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Copyright grants the author exclusive right to determine distribution. In other words, someone cannot distribute your work in a manner you haven't approved.
Is Apple distributing author works in a manner the authors haven't approvde of? If not, no violation.
I went to Apple's site. There's ample opportunity to learn the details before you agree to use their software. That's where deter
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"Apple doesn't want the rights to the ebooks made with iBook Author - all they say is any book made with their software, which they provide for free, can only be distributed ,in Apple's iBook format created by the software, by them."
Sorry, but all you do is to prove the OP's point: the copyright grants the author the right to distribute his work as he sees fits - and Apple wants this right for themselves for ebooks made with iBook Author. Q.E.D.
You still have the right to distribute your copyrighted work as you see fit - Apple gains no control over your copyrighted material - all you are agreeing to is a license that says if you want to create an ebook with our tools you agree to use our distribution mechanism. You have the right to decline the license and not use their tool - you are not assigning your copyright to them, nor losing any other rights granted to you by copyright. It's not even an exclusive right to distribute you are granting Apple
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It's splitting hairs, but Apple is only requiring the exclusive right to distribution of the ebook that was created with their software, not your copyrighted work. You're still free to create an ePub or other format version and distribute it in any way you wish.
It's still a bit of a douche move by Apple, but it's not quite as bad as you're making it out to be.
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You further proved the opposite of what you claim. Apple is asking you to assign rights to them. The right to publish. That gives them control over copyrighted material. Not complete control. Not complete rights. But it grants them contractual rights under copyright law.
So? The author retains the copyright and control over the material. They decide who they will let distribute it, and if both sides agree they enter into a contract giving the publisher permission to publish. That's no different than what authors and publishers have been doing for years.
Apple is getting specific contractual permission to publish one version of the material; not unlimited rights to everything as the GP claimed. Merely using the software doesn't grant Apple any permission to distribute; that
iAuthor (Score:2)
You're not an author. You're an iAuthor.
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How many of you remember the old days when DARPA made a CAD package with tax dollars and felt the citizens should have full access to that source code?
People wanted for the longest time for the Govt to operate as a business to find efficiencies and cost savings. Well, operating as a business means that income needs to be generated by investments. So that is what they are doing, using their income (tax) to generate more income (patent holdings).
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All things considered, the Gov offer is extremely generous and pretty much standard for any government science and technology effort. The government is paying for the effort and all "unlimited rights" means is that they want to have access to the work so that they can use the technology in their efforts and eventually have a product manufactured. They do not force you to give your information away to anyone else. You can still patent/copyright whatever you create and make money off of it in the commercial w
Portal 2 (Score:2, Funny)
Why does this bring to memory the "take your children to work day" in the game? "Here, kid, see this potato? That's boring, let's play with a grenade!"
Time well spent (Score:2)
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Instead of children, it should be young men and women who want to get trained in plane maintenance. Before you learn how to fix them, you start by building them. The Air Force could take over a final stage of assembling the drones. Send approved (for security) vendors a parts list, and buy from each what you need. Have parts delivered to an Air Force assembly location. Have young men who want a free education in assembling and repairing planes put them together, for which they get paid. Force the defense co
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Manhattan project also sounded pretty evil, but it turned out to be pretty good.
I'd say that really depends on your point of view.
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It's just so much better to invest in people, than to buy overprised pieces of outdated warfare machinery. Manhattan project also sounded pretty evil, but it turned out to be pretty good.
I don't really count several hundred thousand dead and the world held in a balance of terror for decades as "pretty good", although there's no certainty that or worse wouldn't have happened with Manhattan.
But the space program sounded good and did good. If we're going to throw money away on stuff why not exploration and discovery rather than destruction and killing?
Why this fascination with economically useless dead weight loss industries that are capable by design of doing nothing but destroying human liv
Insufficiently radical thinking... (Score:5, Funny)
As a bold step down our path toward becoming a computerized, transhuman dystopia, I suggest, nay, Demand, the following proposal be enacted:
All the nation's youth shall compete in brutally demanding cyber-athletics championships. Every year, the most superb competitors will be selected for the Ceremony of Transcendence. After a celebration of their excellence, their brain-meats shall be harvested and join the honored ranks of the Bottled Warriors, fully modular brain support and interface tanks suitable for high-density containerized installation for remote control of America's drone assets, or direct incorporation into locally controlled robotic weapons platforms.
There would be a minor downside, in that the battlefields of the future would start to sound like the hell-world of Xbox live, as LRAD units with the minds of 14 year old gamer kiddies scream "NOOBFAGGOTHACKER!" loud enough to turn a man into gooey paste; but our combination of mindblowing immaturity and stonehearted resolve would terrify our foes into submission...
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I think the mecha anime makers have 25+ years of prior art on you
Human rights violation? (Score:3)
and especially interseting part is:
"Under Article 8(2)(a)(xxvi) of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (ICC), adopted in July 1998 and entered into force 1 July 2002; "Conscripting or enlisting children under the age of fifteen years into the national armed forces or using them to participate actively in hostilities" is a war crime."
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Yeah that's a pretty big stretch.
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And if you read what the program is about it is for "High School Age" kids which leaves pretty much just freshman under 15.
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Remember you can't have slaughter without laughter!
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I would say that every use of children for military purposes of any kind is a violation of international human rights: Military_use_of_children#International_human_rights_law [wikipedia.org]
and especially interseting part is:
"Under Article 8(2)(a)(xxvi) of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (ICC), adopted in July 1998 and entered into force 1 July 2002; "Conscripting or enlisting children under the age of fifteen years into the national armed forces or using them to participate actively in hostilities" is a war crime."
Huge difference between designing weapons and participating actively in hostilities.
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If anything, it is a substantial step less direct than existing JROTC stuff, or even some of the Boy Scouts-esque programs that maintain a bit of their historical connection to WWI/II-era nationalist enthusiasm for development of the natio
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"Conscripting or enlisting children under the age of fifteen years into the national armed forces or using them to participate actively in hostilities" is a war crime."
They are not conscripted into the armed forces so that is not valid.
They are not enlisted into the armed services so that isn't valid.
They are not participating actively in hostilities.
I also didn't see any ages in the link so they may even be targeting this program more to high school so the under 15 years of age might not come into it.
In ot
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They are not conscripted into the armed forces so that is not valid. They are not enlisted into the armed services so that isn't valid. They are not participating actively in hostilities.
All true, but it doesn't make it less scary. Children will be used to design weapons.
A groundless inflammatory reply to a groundless inflammatory story. The new Slashdot marches on.
Oh, sorry, I didn't know you are from Disneyland. Well, in the real world people die from real weapons. Sorry if mentioning that on slashdot hurt your feelings.
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"All true, but it doesn't make it less scary. Children will be used to design weapons."
So what you are saying is that that the post that I replied too was in fact completely invalid and while everything I stated was in fact the truth it just doesn't matter.
"Children will be used to design weapons."
No they will not. This is a DARPA program. The "kids" will not be tasked with designing weapons. They will not be given projects like "Build a robot that can shoot 10 people but not hit friendlies". Get real this
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"All true, but it doesn't make it less scary. Children will be used to design weapons." So what you are saying is that that the post that I replied too was in fact completely invalid and while everything I stated was in fact the truth it just doesn't matter.
I want to say that not everything is black and white as you are learned to believe and how you want to look at this mater.
"Children will be used to design weapons." No they will not. This is a DARPA program. The "kids" will not be tasked with designing weapons. They will not be given projects like "Build a robot that can shoot 10 people but not hit friendlies". Get real this will be a basic science project kind of program. They will be given project like, create a robot that can travel through sand, gravel, and mud.
How do you know that? And what "This is a DARPA program" means for you?
The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) is an agency of the United States Department of Defense responsible for the development of new technology for use by the military.
My point is that children will be used to create weapons. Directly or indirectly it doesn't mater.
You are the one living in fantasyland not I. You are so blinded you dismiss pure manipulation when you see it because you happen to believe in the goal.
What is wrong in believing in th
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Wow you are so self confused.
The world is not back and white, yet you clearly see it that way. Children are being used to create weapons directly or indirectly? Really?
and this.
"I am against war and against violence of any kind. For me is this story a red flag. It's your right to think otherwise..."
The fact you can not see the manipulation is really sad and yet again you throw up an emotional appel. I have never said I am for or not for this program. I never said that I as for war or violence or not. I simp
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Wow you are so self confused. The world is not back and white, yet you clearly see it that way. Children are being used to create weapons directly or indirectly? Really? and this. "I am against war and against violence of any kind. For me is this story a red flag. It's your right to think otherwise..."
The fact you can not see the manipulation is really sad and yet again you throw up an emotional appel. I have never said I am for or not for this program. I never said that I as for war or violence or not. I simply pointed out facts it is you that is dealing with fear and emotion not I nd those are the tools of the tyrant and dictator.
Than cut the crap and say what you think.
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As if the US gives a shit about international conventions, at least when applied to them.
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And you're certainly welcome to that opinion, however:
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I would say that every use of children for military purposes of any kind is a violation of international human rights: Military_use_of_children#International_human_rights_law [wikipedia.org]
and especially interseting part is:
"Under Article 8(2)(a)(xxvi) of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (ICC), adopted in July 1998 and entered into force 1 July 2002; "Conscripting or enlisting children under the age of fifteen years into the national armed forces or using them to participate actively in hostilities" is a war crime."
According to the website, they are not necessarily designing military items. It specifically identifies items like go-carts and mobile robots in the program description. However, I will agree to the extent that having the military involved in education is a slippery slope as it has the potential for abuse and really is no value added. The reason that the military is involved in this is that Congress has budgeted a specific amount of money for STEM. Congress could just as easily provide this money to other o
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not a new idea (Score:4, Interesting)
Cool idea... Wrong agency to do it. (Score:3, Interesting)
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Sorry, I'm being a bit of a cad.
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Boy, now THAT's thinking of the children. (Score:2, Insightful)
Gee, before we only had to worry about the mental fragility of adult engineers who "accidentally" stumble across and create the next atom bomb or nerve agent, and the psychological repercussions of creating a weapon of mass destruction...and now it seems they want kids doing that work.
Not quite sure there's an easy or gentle way of letting little Susie know that her cool little science experiment was responsible for 3 million lives lost. Good luck with that.
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You seriously think the military is gonna tell little Susie about what she was doing? It'll get buried as 'national security' so fast, little Susie won't have time to catch the bus home.
Decent idea I suppose (Score:2)
TV Tropes has a few real life examples.
DANGER TVTROPES link http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/AchievementsInIgnorance [tvtropes.org]
Precision Killing (Score:2)
Yeah, Kids don't know better yet... (Score:2)
Look Mommy, I'm building a drone. Its gonna come down and shoot us... isn't that cool?
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Did anyone go to the DARPA website? (Score:2, Insightful)
Did anyone go to the DARPA website and read what they're doing? They have lots of material on the objectives of the effort. They talk about signing contracts with several large companies and universities. This is your standard DARPA effort for thinking outside of the box. And I saw nothing, I repeat nothing, that suggests that DARPA is trying to subvert the youth of this country.
Please re-read with Dramatic Anouncer voice. (Score:3)
"In a world where warfare is fast becoming fielded by remote controlled and autonomous robots, innovation is the key to victory. The most technologically advanced superpower can see more, plan better, and attack from further away than its inferior adversaries. What better way to revolutionize the drone and robotics industry than use the brilliant minds of our children?"
Hollywood, listen up. I might actually want to see this movie.
On second thought, it might have to be an indie film due to the controversial nature -- Many people find brain extraction and cyberization [youtube.com] quite offensive, especially when the minds of children are on the table...
Publicly funded research (Score:3)
Funded by the Department of Defense, the program comes with a steep cost: The DoD wants unlimited rights to everything the students build.
How is this different that the call for all government funded University research to be publicly available?
Is the DoD asking for exclusive access, or just access? Will they be able to take a kid's research, classify it, and forbid that kid from ever working in that area again? (See Gordon Gould and his laser research for an example)
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Bohm remained in Berkeley, teaching physics, until he completed his Ph.D. in 1943, by an unusually ironic circumstance. According to Peat (see reference below, p. 64), "the scattering calculations (of collisions of protons and deuterons) that he had completed proved useful to the Manhattan Project and were immediately classified. Without security clearance, Bohm was denied access to his own work; not only would he be barred from defending his thesis, he was not even allowed to write his own thesis in the first place!" To satisfy the university, Oppenheimer certified that Bohm had successfully completed the research. He later performed theoretical calculations for the Calutrons at the Y-12 facility in Oak Ridge, used to electromagnetically enrich uranium for use in the bomb dropped on Hiroshima in 1945.
source http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Bohm [wikipedia.org]
paragraph Manhattan Project contributions
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Mr. Gould left Columbia and joined Technical Research Group, a company in Syosset, on Long Island, to try to turn to the laser into a practical device. The military provided $1 million, but Mr. Gould could not work on the research himself. He was denied security clearance because he had taken part in a Marxist study group with his first wife, Glen Fulwider, in the 1940's.
There's much better coverage of Mr. Gould in actual books. They detail how his notebooks with the original laser design had been taken from him and classified so that he couldn't use them.
It's not child labour if it's a competition (Score:2)
And those that don't do well... (Score:2)
Welcome to China 0.4
No different than corporate ownership of patents (Score:2)
If you and your clever friends are so inclined, go talk to a venture capitalist, get some startup funding, build and patent some drones
Part of the advantage of doing it as part of this project is the DoD will bend all sorts of rules for you that would make it all but impossible f
If the "other" side did this... (Score:2)
The U.S. and its attendant NGOs would be screaming from the rooftops about "child soldiers"...
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The U.S. and its attendant NGOs would be screaming from the rooftops about "child soldiers"...
Yes it would, which is pretty ironic given the US has been illegally holding Canadian child soldier Omar Khadr beyond the rule of law or access to your courts in Guantanamo Bay for almost a decade.
South Koreans and Star Craft Robots (Score:2)
If we would build some "Star Craft" style robots, I am sure the South Koreans could defend themselves. Or maybe they could even take over the world!?!
OK, never mind.
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It all works out in the end. Orson Scott Card foretold of this and how it will lead to us defeating the Buggers, which opens up the galaxy to Human colonization.
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Re:That's crappy (Score:5, Funny)
The problem comes when the kids grow up and decide to use this against their former masters
Yes, but when that happens, it's because those kids have to right the wrongs. they do noble things like find a new world for the hive queen to live on and learn the ways of the piggies, and redeem humanity. Though it's true, they are never quite as interesting as when they were kids.
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To be fair, "unlimited rights" does not have the same meaning as "unlimited exclusive rights." It is a shitty summary though, and as with any samzenpus article, I feel dirty by spending more than a few seconds dedicated to it.
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WWI & again in WWII???
beats the alternative (Score:2)
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In the latest months of WWII, when lacking adult soldiers, the German army drafted kids, too... Are the USA at this point of exhaustion ? ;) )
(oops, did I win a Godwin, here ?
You are close. Before the war, the Germans supported several programs encourage kids and hobbyists to make things like planes and rockets. They used the ideas and the education value to build their war machine into the most advanced army in the world. I think that is what the US is doing now.
Note: My post is not a Godwin. These German programs are not what made the Nazis evil. It's simply what made their war machine the most advanced. What started as a group of hobbyists called the Verein für Ra
Godwin? (Score:2)
Godwin's Law simply says that the longer an Internet discussion gets, the more likely a Nazi reference becomes.
It gets a bad rap because those Nazi references are often spurious.
However, this one seems fairly relevant.
The Nazis did have advanced technology (but without enough economy/industry to make full use of it)
Education does start young
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Godwin's Law simply says that the longer an Internet discussion gets, the more likely a Nazi reference becomes
No, it says that one party will compare the other party to the NAZIs, and at that point a) the discussion is over and b) the person who made the comparison lost.
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Godwin's_law [wikipedia.org]
a) and b) are not in the original/basic formulation
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What nobody seems to be mentioning here is that remote controlled war robots will make civilian areas legitimate targets.
This has been true since the Blitz in WWII, all of London was a "legitimate target", as was anything else. There were occasional moments of spontaneous decency on both sides, but churches still got bombed by all.
Economic sanctions target the entire population, why wouldn't you expect retaliation in-kind?
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How long until insurants in Iraq, Afghanistan etc use Raspberry Pi devices to power their IEDs? Add some USB semtex, a camera (for manual booby-trapping), 3g/wifi connectivity, solar power (or a small battery). The poor man's drone!
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"biggest body count possible"
You are either a troll, or seriously uninformed about history and current events.
If it was about body count, we'd just carpet bomb entire areas containing anyone we thought was trouble, using technology we've had handy for over half a century.
But it's not, which you would know, if you bothered to digest any information (or admit it to, if you weren't a lying troll). We've lost thousands of soldiers precisly because it's not about body count. Our rules of engagement in places like Iraq and Afghanistan