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Posted by Walter Bushell on September 10, 2008, 9:46 pm
> Walter Bushell wrote:
> >> With such a system it would be straightforward to industrialize the
> >> whole solar system. As much habitat as we want, as much energy as we
> >> want, whatever megastructures suit our fancy. And, presumably, they
> >> could vacuum and clean the dishes as well. Just make sure to program
> >> them better than the typical SF robot-run-amuck.
> >
> > Ah, there's the rub. Being without such a limitation would be a survival
> > advantage and once started could take over the entire system.
>
> Which is why you program it well. Perhaps we can't make it
> mathematically impossible for such a system to run amuck, but you can
> make it arbitrarily unlikely. Add as many bits of error-correction to
> the genome as you like, and if one family of robots does run amuck have
> the billions of other loyal robots that replicated correctly help to
> destroy it. That'll turn such mutations into a serious survival
> _dis_advantage.
>
> We've managed to keep many other species of self-replicating organisms
> domesticated without any of them rising up in revolt yet, I don't see
> any reason why robots would be different in principle.
Mostly by close watching. If a Scottish Collie is found to have killed a
sheep, all his or her get (all descendants) are killed. This has been
going on for many years.
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> I'd want a robot that was capable of self-replication. With near-term
> technology it'd be rather large, but you're allowing for quite a lot of
> technological advancement so in this case it wouldn't need to be. Maybe
> even something as flexible as Stargate's Replicators.
>
> With such a system it would be straightforward to industrialize the
> whole solar system. As much habitat as we want, as much energy as we
> want, whatever megastructures suit our fancy. And, presumably, they
> could vacuum and clean the dishes as well. Just make sure to program
> them better than the typical SF robot-run-amuck.