We don’t want a world filled with Robots, but those who exist must be identified as Robots Evolve with Experiences.

We don’t want a world filled with so many robots, especially humanoid robots that look like humans, that it is difficult to identify who is a robot and who is human.

So, then why all these guidelines on robots and in robotics?

Well, if they exist, they must be registered with regulations!

And if they don’t exit, there are a lot of humans! What will humans work on if all work goes to robots?

If they are working in an area, say one hit by a massive climate disaster, where humans can’t work, we need robots there; then the robots must be identifiable to be authorized and called for this work on short notice.

If they are building a picnic spot on the Moon to see Earth from there, then we can’t employ humans there; we can employ robots, so robots need identification for themselves.

Each robot has its own properties, its own learning, and its own experiences.

Each robot has solved a different problem; here, the robot’s experience matters, so the robot’s ID card matters.

The identity of a robot is like its Curriculum Vitae: each robot faces new challenges; erasing those challenges would not be good, as experience matters even in robotics and AI.

Each robot evolves with time, with the tasks it solves.

God forbid that we need urgent robots for landslide issues in a city; we can call in the best robots experienced in this area, and humans can take help from them on short notice.

We must remember robots are there to assist humans in what humans can’t do, or what is not safe for humans, or what is not meant for humans to do, for example, taking up rubble from an earthquake-hit area.

At the same time, experiences of robots or AI must not be deleted, as they add to their specialities, giving a variety of evolving robots that learn from the tasks we humans give them.

Same with my last article of passports and ID for robots, this is the case when a robot has solved many unique problems, it has evolved with time, it has learned working with humans, why erase its experiences?

Why delete a robots or ai experiences?

And why make a world filled with so many robots that humans find it difficult to walk?

Yes, if robots exist, they must be identifiable with a unique name and id. Let’s save the good experiences of robots as credentials that the robot is worthy of solving, whether rubble picking or landslide clearing.

Once again, we don’t and should not aim for a world filled with robots, but robots should complement where we need them most in tough tasks, to non-human-friendly jobs.

Published by Nidhika

Hi, Apart from profession, I have inherent interest in writing especially about Global Issues of Concern, fiction blogs, poems, stories, doing painting, cooking, photography, music to mention a few! And most important on this website you can find my suggestions to latest problems, views and ideas, my poems, stories, novels, some comments, proposals, blogs, personal experiences and occasionally very short glimpses of my research work as well.

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