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Wired for War: Everything You Wanted to Know about Robots and War but Were Afraid to Ask, P.W. Singer
Thursday, November 29, 6:00 p.m., Moot Court, Room 100, Faculty of Law, 3660 Peel Street
In the last decade, robotics has moved from the world of science fiction onto the battlefield, and soon onto the home front. The U.S. military for example, went from having a handful of unarmed 鈥渄rones鈥 to more than 8,000 in the air and another 12,000 on the ground. It is joined by over 50 other nations in using military robotics, from Canada, France and the U.K., to Russia, China, and Iran. And now, this new technology is increasingly starting to be used in fields that range from law enforcement to media and journalism.
Much like gunpowder or the steam engine, this new technology is thus posing a series of tough new questions, not just in its use, but also in its ripple effects onto the realms of politics, business, law, and ethics. Join P. W. Singer, best-selling author of the book Wired for War and consultant for groups that range from the Pentagon to the Call of Duty video game series, as he discusses the robotics revolution and the new story of technology and war that our machines are starting to write.
Peter Warren Singer, Director of the 21st Century Defense Initiative and senior fellow at the , will be delivering the 2012 Media@不良研究所 Beaverbrook Annual Lecture entitled, 鈥淲ired for War: Everything You Wanted to Know about Robots and War but Were Afraid to Ask.鈥 The lecture will take place at Moot Court, Room 100, within the Faculty of Law (3660 Peel Street), on Thursday, November 29, at 6:00 p.m. It is free and open to the public.
Singer is the author of (Penguin, 2009); (Pantheon, 2005); and (Cornell University Press, 2003). As the youngest scholar to be named senior fellow in Brooking鈥檚 history, he has also been mentioned on Foreign Policy Magazine鈥檚 Top 100 Global Thinkers list, the Smithsonian Institution鈥檚 list of 100 鈥渓eading innovators in the nation,鈥 and CNN鈥檚 鈥淣ew Guard鈥 list of the next generation of newsmakers. Singer has acted as a consultant for the U.S. Department of Defense and the FBI, and as adviser to a host of entertainment programs 鈥 most recently for the forthcoming sequel to the popular Call of Duty games, .
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