Recently, a chess open competition was held in Moscow. A seven-year-old player played with a player who could decide on a counter move at a moment’s notice. A child player suddenly places a pawn in a square and the opposing player angrily attacks the child player and snaps his finger. The child player had to be shifted to the hospital. The player playing against this child player could not ask: Don’t you have humanity? Not because it was not human, the machine was human. The child player had violated the safety ‘rules’ by moving too fast and the robot was agitated.
The story of a machine rebelling against human domination and trying to take over the earth has often appeared in science fiction and movies, but when humans create machines and put them out there, they make sure that the machine behaves like a human and not like a human. It is still going on. A robotics expert named Christopher Atkeson says that robots have limited intelligence to understand what is going on around them.
The boy whose finger is crushed by the machine while playing chess is said to be lucky. In December 2018, a worker identified only as Zhu was working at a factory in China when a giant robot came as part of his duties and pounced on 49-year-old Zhu, plunging four feet of steel rods into his arms and chest, severing four of his hands. were Xu survived.
In March 2018, Uber put a driverless car on a Forlane Road in Tempe, Arizona, with a man in the driving seat to watch over the car. But this driverless car hit and killed a 49-year-old cyclist named Ellen Herzberg. This is the first reported fatal accident involving a driverless vehicle.
In February 2015, Stephen Pintit, a retired music teacher and father of three, was admitted to the Freeman Hospital in Newcastle-upon-Tyre, Britain, for heart valve surgery.
Dr. A surgeon named Sukumaran Nair employed a human surgical machine named Da Vinci. The robot man was given orders through subtle sounds and people know what went wrong in the order, but Da Vinci acted indiscriminately and when the nurse tried to stop him, he was also injured by the robot man. A Pintit Yantra human had a 90 to 98 percent chance of survival if he had not undergone surgery.
In June 2015, at the Volkswagen plant in Bonnatal, Germany, a mechanical hand tried to lift a part of the machine and the hand fell on a 22-year-old worker. He lifted the worker and slammed him on a metal plate. The worker suffered severe chest injuries and all efforts to save him failed. Basically, as part of the assembly process, this mechanical arm was supposed to lift the different parts and attach them to the right place in the car, but some human fluid caused a malfunction, said a Volkswagen spokesperson.
In 1981, a 37-year-old man named Kenji Yurada, who went to see the ‘health’ of a hydraulic machine man in the sky of Kawasaki Heavy Industries Plant in Japan, was swept away by a mechanical arm while going to shut off the electricity supply, and Kenji became the first victim of the ‘fear’ of machine man in Japan. But the first worker in the world to die due to the ‘error’ of a machine was Robert William of Flatrock, Michigan, who was hit in the head by a machine while unloading goods from a warehouse. The company gave him a compensation of one million dollars but so what?
– Narendra Joshi