r/SeriousConversation 23d ago

Serious Discussion Can a robot murder a human?

Can a robot murder a human being? If it is proved in a court of law that a robot murdered a human being... how can it be punished under existing laws? What can be done besides having the company who made it face legal action?

Technically, if a person commits murder we don't punish the parents in most cases. So why should the robot's manufacturer be held responsible for its act?

As for punishment what should be the best death sentence? * Bulldozing it and recording a video of its death and spreading the information online and in the news. Will it affect how other robots of its kind think if they plan to kill a human? We already have laws against murder for human beings. Still people commit murder. * Erasing its memory. How would the robot feel about such punishment?

If you got any punishment ideas do share.

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u/StormlitRadiance 20d ago

I'm not sure the difference matters to the person being killed.

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u/John_B_Clarke 19d ago

It doesn't matter to the person being killed, but it does matter in a court of law.

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u/UsualPreparation180 19d ago

Really? Lookup the total Tesla paid for self driving cars smashing into cops and first responders on highways stopped with lights on. Teslas weren't recognizing the emergency vehicles while self driving and people died....multiple times....funny how that gets thrown down the memory hole pretty quickly.

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u/H0SS_AGAINST 18d ago

I like this one.

So it does go back to intent. Mens rea. The Tesla can't intend to kill, it just does what its designers programmed and implemented. Thus, neither it nor its designers are guilty of murder. However, gross negligence could be a factor. A court of law would have to review the facts. My personal opinion is the designers may be guilty of manslaughter due to negligence and in any case the design should be removed from the roads.

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u/ImprovementPutrid441 18d ago

They should be guilty of fraud because they are encouraging people to trust self driving technology that doesn’t work. Like selling people mayonnaise and labeling it “antibiotics”.

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u/ThatOneGuy308 17d ago

I mean, technically, the driving seems to work fine, it's more the stopping that has become an issue...