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The weapons in question - killer robots.
12-16-2021, 03:46 PM
Post: #1
The weapons in question - killer robots.
The weapons in question - killer robots.

Washington Post
December 16, 2021

James Dawes is a professor and director of human rights and humanitarianism at Macalester College in St. Paul, Minn.

A meeting is taking place in Geneva this week that could be the moment when the world prevented — or started — its final arms race. The weapons in question: killer robots.

The United Nations is convening a group of diplomats and arms experts to review one of the world’s most important yet least-known treaties: the Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons. At stake is a future world that fans of “The Terminator” franchise might recognize. But that was fiction; this is very real.

Established in 1983, the treaty has been updated regularly to restrict some of the world’s most malicious conventional weapons technologies that pose grave risks to innocent civilians. These include land mines, booby-traps, incendiary weapons, unexploded ordinances and weapons that create non-detectable fragments that render wound treatment nearly impossible. This week, negotiators will decide whether to add autonomous weapons systems to that list.

"So very difficult a matter is it to trace and find out the truth of anything by history." -- Plutarch
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12-19-2021, 11:44 AM
Post: #2
RE: The weapons in question - killer robots.
(12-16-2021 03:46 PM)David Lockmiller Wrote:  The weapons in question - killer robots.

Washington Post
December 16, 2021

James Dawes is a professor and director of human rights and humanitarianism at Macalester College in St. Paul, Minn.

A meeting is taking place in Geneva this week that could be the moment when the world prevented — or started — its final arms race. The weapons in question: killer robots.

The United Nations is convening a group of diplomats and arms experts to review one of the world’s most important yet least-known treaties: the Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons. At stake is a future world that fans of “The Terminator” franchise might recognize. But that was fiction; this is very real.

Established in 1983, the treaty has been updated regularly to restrict some of the world’s most malicious conventional weapons technologies that pose grave risks to innocent civilians. These include land mines, booby-traps, incendiary weapons, unexploded ordinances and weapons that create non-detectable fragments that render wound treatment nearly impossible. This week, negotiators will decide whether to add autonomous weapons systems to that list.

Killer Robots Aren’t Science Fiction. A Push to Ban Them Is Growing.
New York Times 12/19/2021
By Adam Satariano, Nick Cumming-Bruce and Rick Gladstone


A U.N. conference made little headway this week on limiting development and use of killer robots, prompting stepped-up calls to outlaw such weapons with a new treaty.

"So very difficult a matter is it to trace and find out the truth of anything by history." -- Plutarch
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12-20-2021, 10:38 AM
Post: #3
RE: The weapons in question - killer robots.
Not to make light of this truly serious matter- but wasn’t there there an SNL skit about “When Robots Attack?”
Sorry- couldn’t help it.

Bill Nash
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