Will humans love AI robots? | DW Documentary

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2023-08-10に共有
Artificial Intelligence makes art, knows more than many humans and works faster than they do. But will people accept AI-controlled social robots working in the service industry or entertaining those in need of care?

What does a robot need to have to be accepted as a social partner by a human being? Does it need a face? Should the machine understand -- or even show -- emotions?

The psychologist, neurologist and philosopher Agnieszka Wykowska, currently researching at the Italian Institute of Technology in Genoa, says: "We tend to humanize everything. We even see faces in car hoods. This is further reinforced whenever a robot demonstrates humanlike behavior.”

In a care home for the elderly in Rendsburg, the film shows what sort of relationship forms between residents and robots. Hannes Eilers from the Kiel University of Applied Sciences is carrying out tests there with robots for health insurance companies. The robots sing with the elderly people, play games or demonstrate physio exercises. The one thing they’re not allowed to do with them is pray. The systems there function autonomously. This means they can’t access an AI server, so they abide by data protection laws.

But AI servers are already controlling much of our communication. They don’t just suggest what we should read, eat or buy next: ‘chatbots’ also serve as personal contacts. At the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in Boston, the scientist Hossein Rahnama is working on perfecting the appearance and communication skills of chatbots like these. His view: "We now have access to such immense computing power and data that we can create a digital version of every person. Before too long, we can even make them sentient.”

In future, will we be able to tell the difference between a flesh-and-blood human, and their digital clone?

#documentary #dwdocumentary #AI #robots
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コメント (21)
  • @user-ob8en1ef4s
    A man buys a robot that slaps people when they tell a lie. He decides to test it on his family at dinner that night. The man asked his son, "Son, what did you do after school today?" The son replied, "Oh, I just did some homework" and the robot slapped the son. The son said, "Okay I actually watched a movie with my friends". The father asked, "What was the movie?" The son said, "Star Wars, Episode 5". The robot slapped the son. The son stammered "Okay it was Showgirls". The father laughed, "Ugh, I would never watch movies like that". The robot slapped the dad. The mum laughed, "He certainly is your son". The robot slapped the mum.
  • @manlyphal959
    Imaging having remote drones in the cosmos driven by individuals through VR controls! That seems not too far away.
  • @angeltonami001
    Thank you for a very comprehensive and descriptive documentary!!!
  • @anneliu3816
    Many of us would love to have a household AI robot to help with house chores.
  • Reminds me of the movie Surrogates (2009) with Bruce Willis and the movie A.I. Artificial Intelligence with Haley Joel Osment and Jude Law.
  • @arbaz79
    Great documentary as always 👍.
  • "You don't even understand your own consciousness, let me explain it to you". - This is the most important line in this film spoken by Thomas Metzinger. Actually he said a lot of pretty bright things here.
  • @crappycoder
    This reminds me of an episode in Spicy City where a couple dies and they get downloaded to the virtual net. Really fascinating and scary all the same.
  • @StefanMedici
    My theory, and it's only a theory, is we will eventually create an independent sentients. Whether it's, AI or robots or more likely a combination including organic matter. The reason for us doing and wanting to do this wasn't covered in the documentary. My theory is Ego. It's what drives us. First we hunted, then we farmed, then we domesticated animal, creating tools along the way. We created gods to explain why we and everything else exists and happens. We domesticated horses to get us further quicker than our legs could. When we reached the end of what the natural world could take us we invented trains, cars and airplanes to take us further. We've conquered the planet, but we're still not satisfied. Our ego says we still no nothing and everything we've created are just tools. Our ego wants us to be the gods we ourselves created. To do that we need to be immortal but more to the point we need to create new life. Then we will be the gods our ego demands of us. We probably still won't be satisfied, but by then we might have made ourselves extinct anyway.
  • @zzzaaayyynnn
    They speak of 200 to 300 years in the future? That's absurd to even consider at the rate our tech is progressing.
  • @donfields1234
    I fell in love with just the robots voice on the phone... not watching video just playing games and listening. And so I am doomed. ❤😅🎉😊 😂
  • @shindousan
    Well, artificial love would be ironic to say the least, as real love between humans has been lacking for centuries.
  • @lnguyen4982
    "In the beginning, there was man." "Then man made the machine in his own likeness." "Thus did man become the architect of his own demise."
  • @nigellawson8610
    The military applications of AI technology are very frightening. Imagine controlling a robot soldier, fighter plane or a tank, from a distance. It would reduce war to nothing more than a video game. Killing would become impersonal, which might make war more common, especially if the danger of death and injury are removed from the equation for those who happen to possess the technology? This technology would represent the ultimate in drone remote control warfare.
  • @andrewj22
    This video will be hilarious to look back at in a decade or two.
  • @szaki
    My worry is about, if this technology gets into wrong hands to do bad, destructive things, to benefit a few. AI can do good things, benefit humans or even all living things on this planet, but greedy people can override AI's preset limitations, to become uncontrollable.
  • @peacesound1101
    The Big Question isn't if robots will evolve, it's "Will we?"