I can vouch for this. Whenever you explain to someone e.g. a policymaker the problem using quickdraw arguments, you tend to get responses like “have them make it act/think like a human” or “give it a position on the team of operators so it won’t feel the need to compromise the operators”.
But as far as quickdraw arguments goes, this is clearly top notch, and the hook value alone merits significant experimentation with test audiences. This might be the thing that belongs in everyone’s back pockets; when watching Schwarzennegger’s Terminator (1984) and Terminator 2 (1991), virtually al viewers fail to notice how often the robot misses it’s shots even though it has several seconds to aim for the head.
I can vouch for this. Whenever you explain to someone e.g. a policymaker the problem using quickdraw arguments, you tend to get responses like “have them make it act/think like a human” or “give it a position on the team of operators so it won’t feel the need to compromise the operators”.
But as far as quickdraw arguments goes, this is clearly top notch, and the hook value alone merits significant experimentation with test audiences. This might be the thing that belongs in everyone’s back pockets; when watching Schwarzennegger’s Terminator (1984) and Terminator 2 (1991), virtually al viewers fail to notice how often the robot misses it’s shots even though it has several seconds to aim for the head.