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  • FOUR YEARS Y'ALL.

  • FOUR YEA-- FOUR YEARS!

  • Four years.

  • FOUR.

  • FOUUUR YEARRRS.

  • FourYears...

  • Wow.

  • Hello for the roughly twenty-seven hundredth time, I'm Trace, and you are all incredible

  • humans.

  • Four years ago on December 5th of 2012, we started DNews -- and my first video that day

  • was about THE ROBOT TAKEOVER!!

  • Let's do an update, shall we?

  • Over the last four years, there have been a lot of advances in robotics, but the scariest

  • and most amazing robot is ATLAS.

  • Yeah.

  • That's Atlas, Boston Dynamics' awesome humanoid robot.

  • It was first introduced in mid-2013 in a partnership with DARPA!

  • At the time, it was loud, clunky, and dragged around a massive tether, but now in 2016 oh

  • crap.

  • We're screwed.

  • In 2016, it was announced that ATLAS can walk outside, without a tether, with "sensors in

  • its body and legs to balance, and LIDAR and stereo sensors" with the goal of [quote] "making

  • robots that have mobility, dexterity, perception and intelligence comparable to humans and

  • animals, or perhaps exceeding them; this robot is a step along the way."

  • Dammit.

  • Dammit.

  • DAMMIT.

  • The legs of ATLAS are 3-D printed to include "arterial fluid routing," which is just creepy.

  • And in case Atlas isn't freaking you out, the US Navy and Virginia Tech has created

  • the Shipboard Autonomous Firefighting Robot (SAFFiR) which also has two arms and two legs

  • and it can walk on a ship.

  • Can YOU even walk on a ship?

  • Especially, one that's on fire?

  • Guess what, it's 2016 and robots can!

  • But don't show your fear, because soon robots could soon use emotions to manipulate your

  • meat brain into trusting them.

  • In a conference paper by researchers from Mississippi State University explored how

  • people could sense emotions from a robot named Mary

  • The robot displayed anger, calm, fear, happiness and sadness; with success rates as high as

  • about 70-percent for calm and as low as 18 percent for happiness.

  • Apparently, they weren't awesome at displayed emotions, yetbut, a separate (more successful)

  • emotional robot is being tested with children in the Boston area.

  • The robot is talking with kids as they learn Spanish by reading their emotional cues and

  • responding as if the robot is a fellow child.

  • If the kid needs help the robot creates a motivational strategy based on their emotional

  • statewow creepy.

  • But if robots learn emotions, those emotions could help them override their own programming.

  • For example, a Raytheon scientist named James Crowder invented robots that were taught to

  • avoid light, but they also run on solar power -- this is a pretty serious conflict.

  • He told the Washington Post that even though they've been programed to think that light

  • "hurts themthey have to balance the instincts oflight still hurts, but if I don’t

  • find light, I die.’".

  • All these advances have some pretty interesting implicationsrobots are learning to read

  • and respond to our emotions and keep some for their own.

  • And they can now walk outside in the sunshine, AND can defy their own programmingbut

  • robots are still a long way off from a full-blown 'take over.'

  • In 2012, I quoted Sir Martin Rees of the Center for Study of Existential Risk at Cambridge,

  • and he said we'd have about 50/50 chance of wiping ourselves out before 2100 -- with others

  • believing robots would be one of those things.

  • But then, in 2015, he said "[Robots] can’t tie your shoelaces or cut your toenails…”

  • [but] they're getting better

  • He admits they'll probably take some routine jobs, and not just manufacturing, even in

  • medical and legal professions.

  • He goes on to say it's "likely that during this century our society and its economy will

  • be transformed by autonomous robots, even though the jury’s out on whether theyll

  • beidiot savantsor display superhuman capabilities."

  • Look, it’s inevitable that robots will eventually become intelligent.

  • To perform better at some tasks than we humans, but whether we'll start a war for the planet

  • is still up in the air.

  • In reality, maybe we'll transform our economy and none of us will ever need to (or really

  • be able to) work again.

  • Or, perhaps, robots will begin to colonize space for us, while we are stuck on Earth

  • thanks to radiation.

  • It's hard to know, but with the advances in the last four years, it's going to be a wild

  • ride for the next four.

  • Some of you have been with us at DNews since the beginning, thank you.

  • Some joined today, thank you.

  • Seriously, from the bottom of my heart, thank you so much for supporting us over these last

  • 4 years.

  • 2017 is going to be BIG!

  • So this was an update to one of the very first videos I did for DNews.

  • It aired on the very first day of DNews, December 5, 2012, watch it here and lets us know down

  • in the comments what you thought of this video and subscribe so you get more DNews.

FOUR YEARS Y'ALL.

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