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Should Children Form Emotional Bonds with Robots?

2 pointsby mark-ruwtover 7 years ago

2 comments

tree_of_itemover 7 years ago
I think an important question here is this: who owns this robot? Because we&#x27;re in the middle of a war on general purpose computation, where device and software manufacturers refuse to relinquish control over their products, instead retaining ownership from afar with DRM, patents and so on.<p>Is the child or their family free to modify this robot as they see fit? Are they able to inspect it to make sure it&#x27;s not spying on them? It strikes me as very dangerous to form an &quot;emotional bond&quot; with a machine that serves someone else&#x27;s interests over yours.
mark-ruwtover 7 years ago
My favorite passage:<p><i>The idea is to create “a deeper and deeper emotional connection,” Sofman said. “And if you neglect [the toy robot], you feel the pain of that.”</i><p><i>When he told me this, I felt a flash of not-quite-anger. It seemed almost cruel to design a robot that could play on a young kid’s emotions. And I had never considered that, in the coming human–robot conflagration, robots might take over simply by expertly manipulating us into letting them win.</i>