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  • Advanced body armor, drones, cyborgs. CYBORGS. Is this the future of the police?

  • [MUSIC]

  • This is Trace for DNews! Robocop is out in theaters, promising action and a crazy cool

  • reimagining of the 1980s robotic future film set in Detroit. The old film had a lot of social commentary,

  • and represented the fear of turning over our safety to the dominion of robots. 30 years

  • later, with robotics permeating more of our society than ever, the concern is still real,

  • and far closer to the surface. ... I mean, we may not be ready to put a man's head into

  • a machine body, but we got a chance to talk to the cast of the new Robocop to ask them

  • why the idea of a robotic human hybrid is so compelling.

  • It can just take us to a place where we have to be careful of the consequences. There's

  • an interesting emotional aspect of this [film] that's also a moral dilemma: when do you stop

  • being a human being and when are you a machine?

  • I'm not talking about singularity, but in the case of Robocop, he's amputated from his

  • throat down. The rest of his body is mechanic and he also has artificial intelligence implants

  • in his brain that control some of his decision making.

  • We have to be careful of the consequences.

  • I just think the idea of the combination of man and machine is quite the delicious cocktail.

  • The best free roaming humanoid robot we've got now, according to the DARPA Robotics Challenge,

  • is SCHAFT. The Japanese robot isn't as sexy as RoboCop, but it's designed to help with

  • nuclear disasters, not to look good while battling on camera. SCHAFT doesn't inspire

  • quite as much fear. It can drive a car, navigate rough terrain, remove debris, open doors,

  • cut holes in walls and manage a number of other dexterous tasks like hooking up hoses

  • and turning valves -- all extremely valuable in disaster scenarios, but not exactly the

  • scariest robot in the world. And SCHAFT is nowhere near to being the robot-human hybrid

  • that Robocop is.

  • The new film deals with drone warfare, too. In the year 2028, Robocop is created by the

  • multinational conglomerate "Omnicorp" as a way to circumvent a new law prohibiting drones

  • from bearing firearms.

  • As of today, private unmanned aerial vehicles that fly above 400 feet are still prohibited

  • by the FAA, though there's a mandate for American airspace wide open to drones by September

  • 30, 2015. So far, filmmakers, border-patrol and police have made some basic use of domestic

  • drones, but at the moment they're still expensive and hard to find here at home. The U.S. military,

  • though, they've deployed 11,000 drones since 2002, and 50 countries have their own drone

  • programs -- including China, Israel, and Iran. We might be looking at a future without humans

  • at the control stick.

  • Luckily for us, RoboCop is still safely in the realm of science-fiction, but the technology

  • is on the horizon. Drones can already fly, drive, run and navigate disaster area -- but

  • are we REALLY that far off from a military robot soldier? Would we be somehow LESS afraid

  • of cyborgs than straight-up robots?

  • There's always going to be a man behind the machine behind the machine behind the machines...

  • There's never going to be a finger that's pointed nowhere.

  • As technology advances and predictions of the merging of man and machine looms, our

  • laws, police, and citizenry are going to be rushing to keep up with the advance...

  • If something like RoboCop really existed and you came across him, how would you feel?

  • It's freaky to me. As Gary, I'd be very weary. I'd be a little unnerved by it.

  • What do you think? Is a human-robot hybrid the future? Or pure drone warfare like in

  • other movies and science fiction? Release your paranoia in the comments, thanks for

  • watching DNews, make sure you subscribe.

Advanced body armor, drones, cyborgs. CYBORGS. Is this the future of the police?

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