Tuesday, May 08, 2007

South Korea plans code of ethics for robots

Tech-savvy South Korea, which predicts there will be a robot in every household in little more than a decade, is drawing up a code of ethics for the machines.

A 12-member task force including scientists, lawyers and doctors wants to have a set of rules by the end of the year to prevent android abuse and define proper relations between robots and humans, the commerce ministry said.

The panel's work comes as South Korea is facing a future with a smaller and older population that will start to rely on robots for such tasks ranging from patrolling the heavily armed border with North Korea, cleaning houses and performing surgery.

Officials said the code may borrow from the laws of robotics spelled out some 60 years ago by science fiction writer Isaac Asimov, author of "I, Robot" which was turned into a Hollywood movie starring Will Smith.

Asimov's three laws said robots must not injure humans or allow harm to come to them, obey orders given by humans unless those orders conflict with the first law and protect their own existence as long as that protection does not violate the other two laws.

South Korea spends about $80 million a year to develop robots and is trying to create models that will help take care of its rapidly ageing society.

There's a news video here.

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