Читать книгу Robot Roma: The Last Hope for Humanity. Science fiction story - Alexander Chesalov - Страница 3

Robot Roma: the last hope for Humanity

Оглавление

It was the unremarkable year of 2124…

The dark stone room of the underground bunker was stuffy and smelled of musty dampness. Somewhere nearby, large drops of water hit the concrete floor. The bulbs in the dirty, translucent nightlights wrapped in steel wire smoldered dimly.

Huge aluminum control panels with hundreds of colored lights and indicators with rusted metal nameplates adorned the oversized gray concrete walls of the abandoned military bunker of the National Security Planning and Control Command Center.

The damp, warm air had, over the years of neglect, made this work of concrete art look like some unknown artist had mixed colors of lime scale and rust and painted everything around it in whimsical white and red patterns.

All the interior technological decorations of this gloomy room said that this bunker, located in a distant underground city, had not been visited for a long time.

In the darkness of all this reinforced concrete splendor of the past, a humanoid creature sat in a bizarre and somewhat unnatural pose on a large metal chair at a huge table covered with various buttons and joysticks.

This was his underground realm. He had lived here for years without ever coming out. Everyone who had once known him had long since given him up for dead, but only he knew the truth – he was and still is here. Years of being forgotten by the outside world had helped him survive and stay alive in his own way.

He sat in his chair and looked at the analog control panels that no one had used in a long time. He couldn’t understand why all this had become useless, so useless. A thousand thoughts about the past and the future swirled in his head. Right now, he couldn’t even imagine what modern humans looked like and what had happened to them in recent years. The fanciful images and abstract animations his AI were drawing probably didn’t match the images of the real world for a long time.

Despite the perfection of its electronic brain, made up of billions of self-learning neural networks that constantly and independently updated themselves, the robot lacked the new data it needed to unleash its full power. In the distant past, information came to him from all over the world, but at some point, it stopped. The whole world ceased to exist for him in a brief moment.

Nothing had disturbed his peace for years, and suddenly he heard a sound. Someone or something was coming and rumbling through the underground tunnel towards the wall of his bunker.


***

In the distant year 2045, the International Union of Robot Manufacturers, supported by the leaders of the world’s leading countries, adopted a set of laws regulating the relationship between man and machine. These laws clearly defined the framework for the operation and production of not only humanoid robots and artificial intelligence, but also the list of technologies used for their production.

All robot manufacturing standards have been defined in such a way that, on the one hand, robots can strictly comply with the four basic laws of robotics.1

Despite the perfection of multidimensional printing of living tissues and the spread of human cyborgization, the production process of humanoid robots was prohibited to make their external appearance closely resemble a human. The robot could resemble a human in shape and internal mechanisms, but its face and body had to be industrially designed. Simply put, instead of a beautiful, perfect silicone face, the robot would have a «coffee machine» instead of a head – with light bulbs instead of eyes and a speaker instead of a mouth. In fact, this seemingly unusual and somewhat eccentric idea helped solve a major problem facing humanity, namely the identification of a human being with a robot as a self-similar living being. People stopped being afraid of emotional attachment to robots and the fact that they could damage or fatally injure humanoid fembots, cyborgs, or androids.

Based on the first four laws, the International Union of Robot Manufacturers has formulated the so-called subsequent laws of robotics, which in 2045 will be as follows:

– Zero. A robot cannot harm humanity or allow humanity to be harmed by its inaction;

– First. A robot cannot harm a human being or, by its inaction, allow a human being to be harmed;

– Two. A robot must obey all orders given by a human, except when those orders contradict the first law;

– Third. A robot must take care of its own safety to the extent that it does not contradict the first or second law;

– Fourth. A robot cannot deceive a human being and manipulate its consciousness;

– Fifth. A robot may have rights and duties within the social group of humans in which it functions and is operated, as long as these rights and duties do not conflict with other robot laws;

– Sixth. The lifetime of the robot and the useful operation of all materials and technologies used for its creation shall be one hundred years, including the lifetime of all internal programs of the robot and artificial intelligence.

– Seventh. A robot shall not reproduce in detail the external appearance of a human being or any other living being on Earth in such a way that it can be associated with a human being or any other living being.2


An interesting feature of the development of industrial design, robotics and ergonomics in 2045 were visual concepts and prototypes described by science fiction writers of the 50—60s of the twentieth century.

The new robotics laws were designed to ensure the safety and well-being of both humans and the robots themselves. They were also designed to ensure that robots were not mistaken for living beings, which was important for the continued existence of all humanity.


***

The silence of the concrete temple of buttons, lights, and instruments of the National Security Planning and Control Center was broken by a soft creaking and grinding. After another minute, there was a buzzing sound in the semi-darkness, and sparks of light from multicolored bulbs ran through all the devices. What used to be a silent statue and a semblance of a man sitting in the center of the hall came to life.

A creature with a head like a coffee maker, with eyes-lamps, nose-valve, mouth-speaker and a body in the form of a rectangular nightstand, arms and legs like a human skeleton, began to wake up slowly and creakily from its eternal machine sleep.

He stood up from his chair, not knowing what to do. He was afraid of being discovered, but he also didn’t want to be left alone in this gloomy place for another good hundred years.


It was the unremarkable year 2124…

No one remembered that there was still life in the dark depths of this bunker. Some kind of electronic life that was not connected with the outside world and its problems. She was only for him, and he loved her. He had been its spiritual and material guardian for years. And now, as someone or something was walking toward the bunker, he realized that just a little more would change his life forever.

He slowly got up from his chair…


***

Robot IA 661125 was the name of the industrial version of the world’s most advanced robot. Its heart was the world’s fastest quantum computer, and its mind was the most advanced artificial superintelligence. The IA 661125 robot was capable not only to make a huge number of calculations per second, but also to manage simultaneously the infrastructure of entire cities, regulating not only the traffic or electricity supply, but also to ensure the vital activity of all biological beings living in these cities.

However, a little over a hundred years ago, one version of Robot IA 661125 was purchased by the Department of Defense to support the operation of the National Security Planning and Management Center.

The robot was not only a perfect machine that integrated without any problems with all the most sophisticated computing networks and computers of the Ministry of Defense, but also became an indispensable assistant in planning and conducting all military operations around the world and in space without exception.

Military engineers literally re-soldered several tens of thousands of different jumpers on the internal processors of the civilian version of the robot, boosting its performance by several hundred times. That, of course, required a complete modernization of the entire system of its liquid cooling, which, like the blood of a living person, washed all the internal electronic parts of the robot. And this task was accomplished.

The programmers, in their turn, removed part of the program code from its «brains», which ensure the operation of artificial superintelligence, almost all ethical restrictions associated with the laws of robotics. But what they did not manage to get rid of at all was realization of the condition of the sixth law of robotics. The physical wear and tear of all the materials from which the robot was made was laid down at the level of its production technologies.

All the nano-, bio- and neuro-technologies developed that time in the Ministry of Defense, unfortunately, did not yet allow to extend the service life of the «iron» and its robotic units for more than a hundred years.

IA 661125 was being tried to make the ultimate military cyborg. Experiments to modernize him were going on continuously. Scientists tried to use synthetic protein on it to give it a more human appearance. Additional nanorobots were incorporated to increase its lifespan. They’ve tried all sorts of things, but nothing has worked. Some of the new laws of robotics were impossible to overcome.

One time, in a burst of creative desperation, scientists tried to remake the IA 661125 robot into a fembot – a robot that looks like a woman, giving it the image of a charming blonde. The so-called scientific poke method, known to all scientists around the world who rely on the speed of decision-making, eventually led to a temporary short circuit in the robot’s electronic brain, and it declared:


There’s a buzz in my head today,

Joints rubbing against joints.

My whole-body ripples with the ripples of days,

And it’s all octaves in my head.

I didn’t wake up, I didn’t fall asleep,

I haven’t forgotten my promises.

It’s all been a mess for a long time

In the intricacies of neural.

Who biohacking preferred,

1

.The first three laws of robotics were formulated by Isaac Asimov in the short story «Roundabout» in 1942, and zero in the novel «Robots and Empire» in 1986., and on the other hand, that more advanced machines than humans have a limited lifespan for the resources and materials used in them, which would not exceed the lifespan of humans themselves

2

.The fourth through seventh laws of robotics were proposed by the author of this story in 2020 and published in the book Digital Transformation.

Robot Roma: The Last Hope for Humanity. Science fiction story

Подняться наверх