The Daily Telegraph – November 18, 2009
Law and the sexual rights of robots
By Kate Devlin
SOCIETY must decide if it will accept relationships between humans and robots before the sophisticated machines start demanding rights, a legal expert has warned. Rapid advances in technology mean cyborgs, or human-like robots, are no longer a vision of a distant future. The machines, made famous by films such as Terminator and Blade Runner, are stepping out of fiction into reality. Earlier this year researchers said they had created robot “scientists” able to think.
As the machines become sophisticated, they could demand “human rights”, said Anna Russell, of the University of San Diego. One of the flashpoints could be over sexual relationships with humans. “If a self-aware, super-intelligent, thinking, feeling humanoid is developed, the legal system will be hard-pressed to distinguish this creature legally from human actors on grounds not stemming from a religious or moral prejudice,” she writes in an article for the journal Computer Law and Security Review.
Most societies would want to regulate relationships with cyborgs. As the technology improves “it will be inevitable that legal issues would be raised and the love lines blurred,” she says. “In what way would such sexual activities be regulated, however, and how regulation would work is not clear.”



