Looks like Skynet is on the rise early enough.
(www.thegatewaypundit.com)
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The article seems deliberately geared to make you think it was one of the humanoid Robots.
Given the fact it was used in the production of automobiles. It likely was a Robotic Arm. Apparently the staff didn’t make sure it was properly shut down with the other arms in the area.
It does raise questions about the speed of integration and upgrades. It took a couple decades if not longer. For Robots to initially make their appearance and have their kinks and safety problems worked out before they hit mainstream production lines for the Automakers and factories.
The newest advances. Are having a minuscule fraction of the time before they integrate them sometimes measured in mere months. Coincidentally coinciding with the comparative lightning pace of and integration of advances the past few years in Robots. Accidents are increasing.
All robots should have a big ass on/off switch on them “LIKE BIG”
Yep, that can be activated with the touch of a feather, too..... And they need to be hard-coded to completely self-destruct if they ever even THINK of blocking anyone who reaches for it....
We are building fucking skynet and everyone thinks its funny.
So we're all about clickbait here? This is a shit article from GP.
The worker forgot to disable the robot during the service phase. It didn't "attack" the worker".
You've got somewhat of a point, but why don't all these robots have sensors built into them just like table saws, where the moment it detects flesh (or anything similar - see demonstrations with hot dogs) they immediately shut down & emergency brake the blade.
Actually; HOW THE ACTUAL FUCK is it possible that these robot's DO NOT have the same sensors as a damn basic ass table saw?
Seems wreckless at best, malicious at worst.
I'm neither an engineer nor a workplace safety expert, but the first thing that springs to my mind is "what systems are in place in case of a situation like this?"
We need to human-proof stuff like this.
And, sure; sounds like the worker bears a touch of blame for forgetting to disable it, but again; you MUST PLAN on that sort of stuff.
That's basic human nature.
Otherwise, why even have safety features at all if you're going to not make them at least somewhat redundant?
I am sorry, Dave, I’m afraid I can’t do that. Watch the two dance at the end of the video…..what do you see? https://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2023/12/teslas-latest-humanoid-robot-optimus-gen-2-can-handle-eggs-without-cracking-them/
I think someone should design an electronic tool that will disable any electronics and stop a robot in its tracks.
Ball bearings ..lots of ball bearings
This ain’t even new, just fear mongering with a fresh set publishers
[Source] (https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-12869629/Tesla-robot-ATTACKS-engineer-companys-Texas-factory-violent-malfunction-leaving-trail-blood-forcing-workers-hit-emergency-shutdown-button.html?ns_mchannel=rss&ns_campaign=1490&ito=social-twitter_mailonline)
The deep state wants this. So they can call for control of AI!