Videos featuring people roleplaying robophobic scenarios have gone viral across TikTok and beyond, drawing comparisons to real-world hatred and discrimination. The trend first emerged in early to ...
The future is here. Driverless vehicles, drones, machine learning, and other emerging technologies offer programmable assistants able to handle mundane tasks and critical life-saving interventions ...
They also reposted the album cover for Robophobia on their Instagram and an official poster for their upcoming Atlanta performance at the SWEETWATER 27th Anniversary show next week, February 17. They ...
The boom of AI-generated music has caused a divide across the industry. While superstars like Drake and Bad Bunny have rejected its rise in popularity. The Recording Academy has embraced the new ...
This article continues my review of Robophobia by Professor Andrew Woods. See here for Part 1. I want to start off Part 2 with a quote from Andrew Woods in the Introduction to his article, Robophobia, ...
If you often find yourself doomscrolling on social media, it is likely you have encountered a new parodic trend on artificial intelligence: videos about “clankers.” In these videos, “clankers,” ...
With restrictions on Palestinian workers coming to Israel for employment and the reluctance of foreign workers to go during a war. Unable to hire cooks, waiters, cleaning workers, and others at ...
CINCINNATI — Robots are secretly plotting to kill us. Or enslave us. Or, at best, they will take our jobs, one by one. From science fiction written by Isaac Asimov eight decades ago to “Dilbert” ...
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This blog is the first part of my review of one of the most interesting law review articles I’ve read in a long time, Robophobia. Woods, Andrew K., Robophobia, 93 U. Colo. L. Rev. 51 (Winter, 2022).