[R_H] wrote:
No, it's pointing out that they're not a bunch of ignorant peasants, in addition to the bandwidth issue
Who argued that position?
Sounds like you are off to see the wizard with that one.
[R_H] wrote:
Big assumption.
My point was, just because the GWOT isn't RAR PANZER WAR, doesn't mean that war between nation-states (or parties similarily well equipped/trained, example Hezbollah) is not a possiblity within a short timespan.
Even if the U.S. decided to go to war with gotee wearing U.S. from a parralel universe, breaking encryption in real time is HARD.
Hezbollah wasn't actually doing this. IDF weren't using their radios properly.
Uncluttered wrote:I didn't say you couldn't still do that.
The problem is, sending a soldier out there to blow it up kind of defeats the purpose of using robot doesn't it.
[R_H] wrote:
The use of more and more robots, however autonomous, will not eliminate the need for combined arms. The ATGM didn't eliminate MBTs from battlefields.
What are you actually arguing against?
This is not an argument against combined arms, or an argument for replacing all human soldiers with robots. It's about augmenting a human force with robots.
If you have to send a soldier into a dangerous scenario to destruct a damaged robot, then your robots aren't augmenting very well in that instance.
If all your soldier has to do is walk over and blow it up, then he/she might as well just drag it to the repair shop.
[R_H] wrote:
Why bother with failsafes and preventing reverse engineering?
Your statement makes me hope you don't work for any military contractors.
[R_H] wrote:
Why bother with failsafes......
So your lithium battery doesn't overcharge and blow the fuck up, starting a fire and lighting off the ammo, killing a tent full of jarheads nearby it should have been helping guard.
So the motors or hydraulics don't stress the frame of the arm, twisting itself into a pretzel.
So the robots fuel pump shuts off when fuel pressure suddenly drops, preventing a leaking fuel line from starting a fire and burning to death the soldier using the damaged robot for cover.
So the robots machine gun doesn't swivel around and shoot itself in the radiator.
So the battery disconnects via a contactor when the DC motor controller is damaged by a bullet, preventing the robot from a sudden accelerating into your soldiers as they get ready to fire a morter.
[R_H] wrote:
......preventing reverse engineering?
So your patent isn't stolen by a bigger military contractor.
So your robot soldier isn't mass produced in a chinese factory by the thousands.
So someone doesn't find a zero day exploit you didn't know about.
So the information in your robots CPU isn't used for espionage.
[R_H] wrote:
If I'm not mistaken, very little military hardware has built in self-destruct devices. If you don't want to lose it, don't use it.
That's because very little military hardware has a droid brain on board.
You will find that things like drones, DO have some sort of self destruct on board. This is a silly thing to argue.
[R_H] wrote:
Remember to get the hypervelocity cereals, none of that subsonic shit.
I'll make sure it's fortified with iron.
Uncluttered wrote:They are welcome to use it as an ashtray, a doorstop, or a coffee table.
However, there should at the very least, be a minimum of development put into denying them using it.....wait for it..........AS A ROBOT !!
[R_H] wrote:Because lots of military hardware has that...find some other way to blow it up.
Most military hardware has a procedure to render it "useless" to the enemy. I'm just talking about the hardware doing it to itself.
Uncluttered wrote:When combat robots become ubiquitous, it's not going to be easy for a soldier or more importantly, a civilian journalist, to tell the difference between a "loyal" platform, and a compromised lobotomized rolling bomb.
[R_H] wrote:
Could argue that implementing a self-destruct mechanism implies that the 'bot is not to be trusted.
I don't really care how the robot feels. If a war robot has feelings, it's a poor design.
[R_H] wrote:
Other, less drastic measures would be implementable which would reduce the possibility of a ROGUE ROBOT.
If I can't use failsafes and anti tamper devices, tell me, how am I going to stop a "ROGUE ROBOT"? Am I going to take away its cell phone and TV privileges?
[R_H] wrote:
So why exactly are you harping on about needing a self-destruct then?
Because it sucks when the "ignorant peasant" cracks open the robot, and using parts from an RC car, pilots it back to you with about two pounds of pure love onboard.
Uncluttered wrote:
The more operators you have, the more opportunities the insurgent has to exploit robotic control.
[R_H] wrote:
I assume subverting control of the robot would be easiest when the operator is close to the enemy (ie around the corner, which makes him more vulnerable if he's not directly paying attention to his surroundings and/or visibly controlling the 'bot).
Yes. Exactly. Which is why it's likely to eventually happen, even with soldiers and robots guarding him.
This would be an argument FOR not against IFF.
[R_H] wrote:
Providing IFF-capability sounds very complicated and expensive, seeing how there's probably always going to be an operator in the loop. Might as well just go with RO then.
The soldiers were kicking ass, right until their internet went out....
[R_H] wrote:
How would IFF be implemented (I'm guessing in a manner which reduces false negatives)?
There are many ways to do it.
The simplest way, is for the IFF to deny the robot a certain arc of firing based on the location of the soldiers wearing the transponders.
This would be short range only, maybe even infrared, or it becomes an Intel exploit, and a missile lock.
Perhaps the soldier can also designated entire areas as off limits. A school, a house, etc.
[R_H] wrote:
I find myself agreeing with Uncluttered (with the spirit, perhaps not the content), perhaps for the first time in this thread
The object of the conversation is as much about getting rid of faulty personal conclusions, as much as it is about having a persuasive argument for the other persons.
If you won't disagree with me, who will?