Is the Death Star's AI as unreliable as the MAGI or something?

Moderator: Vympel
Now THATS a desing oversight.CaptHawkeye wrote:Of interest to me is why the Death Star apparently did nothing to stop R2 from looking around its file archives, shutting the garbage compactors on/off, and possibly fucking with the water temperature in Tarkin's shower for shits and giggles. You'd think the Death Star would have a computer AI at least as intelligent as R2 hiding in its massive architecture. Even if just for software security.
Is the Death Star's AI as unreliable as the MAGI or something?
I assume you mean he opened the door on Bespin to get to the Falcon. Not really much of a feat, considering the door has a specific interface that R2 units come with the tool to access. Also like C-3PO said, "Artoo, you can tell the computer to override the security system."Isolder74 wrote:Yes we have.Darth Tanner wrote:How so? We never see him do anything 'infiltrator' like. He can access computers but we never see him break open a security door or do anything a standard issue maintenance/navigator droid couldn't.
Opened the door to the Falcon ESB
Hacked the files on the Falcon's Hyperdrive
Using the Bunker in Jedi as an example is bad because he got shot before he even got started.
Only after Han and Luke broke into the detention center did R2 have any trouble looking things up. He was able to look at the Prisoner Files. You think that isn't restricted?
Sure we did. The Falcon obviously has some sentience otherwise why would 3PO be having trouble getting info from it. 3PO warns R2 about trusting strange computers.Serafina wrote:Then again, we never saw an sentient AI that wasn't a droid in Star Wars.
A possbile explanation is that they want to prevent an AI takeoff - a droid has very limited self-improving capabilities, something which is not true for a sumper-computer scale AI.
Not really. Considering the insane amounts of memory droids have, they would need to program blocks against this sort of thing. In the beginning of ANH R2 already has almost 2 decades of memories, and then gets the complete plans for a 100 mile wide space station shoved in there. But we don't see him starting to have problems due to lack of space.Serafina wrote:A possbile explanation is that they want to prevent an AI takeoff - a droid has very limited self-improving capabilities, something which is not true for a super-computer scale AI.
Granted, i forgot about that.Havok wrote:Sure we did. The Falcon obviously has some sentience otherwise why would 3PO be having trouble getting info from it. 3PO warns R2 about trusting strange computers.Serafina wrote:Then again, we never saw an sentient AI that wasn't a droid in Star Wars.
A possbile explanation is that they want to prevent an AI takeoff - a droid has very limited self-improving capabilities, something which is not true for a sumper-computer scale AI.
Both of those seem to indicate the computers in Star Wars have personalities and their own intelligence. The only difference between droids and computers seems to be size and mobility.
As for not encouraging AI, that is why they have mind wipes.
Except that it can't communicate with its crew directly, C3PO needed to find out the information that the hyperdrive was damaged. That might indicate that the droid brain of the Falcon is simply limited in its functionality or that its just computer diagnostic software that reported to C3PO the damage report status.However, the Falcon still seems to be on the "same scale" as droids
That the Falcon is a rust bucket pile of home modifications that might not have a standard computer system or a system that a translator droid isn't able to use effectively.The Falcon obviously has some sentience otherwise why would 3PO be having trouble getting info from it
Also he had the ruler of the city there to help him with any authorisation codes he needed, Lando said the codes had been changed but he was still able to issue city wide notifications which presumably means he still had some control.I assume you mean he opened the door on Bespin to get to the Falcon. Not really much of a feat, considering the door has a specific interface that R2 units come with the tool to access.
Ok I concede that. It would be highly foolish to keep data on high level prisoners on a open computer system.He was able to look at the Prisoner Files. You think that isn't restricted?
There must be millions of droids on the Death Star to make up for its small crew compliment, perhaps R2 was able to access data on a guest user account or a simply maintenance account that has limited oversight.Of interest to me is why the Death Star apparently did nothing to stop R2 from looking around its file archives
You expect, though, that even low level accounts would require a certain level of authorisation, albeit less than more sensitive systems. Therefore, the fact that Artoo was able to access anything shows that he has a certain degree of infiltration software, and his inability to access anything crucial is simply a limitation of that software.Darth Tanner wrote:There must be millions of droids on the Death Star to make up for its small crew compliment, perhaps R2 was able to access data on a guest user account or a simply maintenance account that has limited oversight.
I seem to recall a tracking device and an easy escape being plotpoints in that movie.Darth Tanner wrote:Ok I concede that. It would be highly foolish to keep data on high level prisoners on a open computer system.He was able to look at the Prisoner Files. You think that isn't restricted?
Crazedwraith wrote:A plan only conceived after they busted into the detention level and rescued Leia.
This was while Han, Luke, Ben, Chewie and the droids were still on the Falcon.Darth Vader wrote:They must be trying to return the stolen plans to the Princess. She may yet be of some use to us.
What R2 did was essentially rifling through file cabinets and log books. Since the Death Star was new, I'm sure security guards and other personnel still needed diagrams to know how to get from one post to another.Cpl Kendall wrote:Or in the manner of complacent soldiers everywhere, they left the terminal unsecured.
I figure they had R2 do it because he's either faster or they have no idea how to look for her themselves. I'm not sure but I don't R2 is ever actually shown accessing a computer any other way but with his little stick.Stark wrote:Yeah, Blackshirt #776 could have let his thing plugged in, but then you wouldn't expect R2 to have to use his pokey-prod. They clearly used him to 'access' the computer, as he does elsewhere where he defeats security (Bespin etc).
Probably. I don't have much problem with her location being easily accessible from the computer anyways, most military detention facilities I've visited just have a board with the cells and names on them in the open behind the duty desk.What R2 did was essentially rifling through file cabinets and log books. Since the Death Star was new, I'm sure security guards and other personnel still needed diagrams to know how to get from one post to another.
Most heavy engineering control rooms until fairly recently have been pretty indecipherable in that manner. The line board could be showing coca-cola premix feed tube networks for all we know.Stark wrote:Perhaps it's related to the strange lack of keyboards or standard interfaces? That console was fucking wierd, with semi-circle button arrays and a giant line-board that looked like a train track controller when I was a kid.Luke almost certainly had no idea how to use that system, and Ben was happy to let R2 do the gruntwork, so maybe you're right.
Yeah they did, the crewman who was trying to reach TK421 heads over to the door after Han/Luke pull the "my radio is busted" trick and he gets shot when they burst in, his buddy gets shot at the terminal IIRC.JointStrikeFighter wrote:
As for the insecure terminals; didn't they just bust in an shoot everyone while they were working?