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- From: Werner Uhrig <werner@rascal.ics.UTEXAS.EDU>
- To: humourous-friends@rascal.ics.utexas.edu
- Subject: what the backbone is chuckling about these days ....
-
- I wonder if "temporary insanity" is a valid defense for a computer;
- or, maybe: "a virus made me do it" ... ?!!
-
-
- To: <deleted to protect the innocent>
- Subject: Those crazy soviets...
- Date: Mon, 29 May 89 12:51:20 EST
- From: <deleted to protect the guilty>
-
- I had misplaced the paper this was in and thought I'd lost it.
- I just now found it and thought the following article would be of
- interest. I's from the 14 March 1989 issue of "Weekly World News" --
- one of those supermarket tabloids.
-
- Computer Charged with Murder After Frying Chess Champ
- by Ragan Dunn
-
- A Soviet super-computer has been ordered to stand trial for the murder
- of chess champion Nikolai Gudkov -- who was electorcuted when he
- touched the metal board that he and the machine were playing on!
-
- "This was no accident -- it was cold-blooded murder," Soviet police
- investigator Alexei Shainev told reporters in Moscow.
-
- "Niko Gudkov won three straight games and the computer couldn't stand
- it. When the chess master reached for his knight to begin play in the
- fourth game, the computer sent a lethal surge of electricity to the
- board surface. The computer had been programmed to move its chess
- pieces by producing a low-level electric current.
-
- "Gudkov was electrocuted while a gallery of hundreds watched."
-
- The decision to put the computer on trial stunned legal experts around
- the world. [I hope computer experts are also shocked, so to speak.
- --spaf] But the Soviets are convinced that the computer had the pride
- and intelligence to develop a hatred for Gudkov -- and the motive and
- means to kill him.
-
- The mind-boggling murder drama unfolded during a six-day chess
- marathon between the M2-11 supercomputer and Gudkov, a world class
- chess player.
-
- According to reports, Gudkov defied all odds [Calculated by the same
- supercomputer, no doubt. --spaf] and beat the machine in three consecutive
- games. And when they prepared to begin their forth, a deadly dose of
- electricity flowed up into the electronic board and zapped Gudkov dead.
-
- Soviet authorities initially thought that the surge of electricity was
- caused by a short-circuit. But an examination of the computer
- revealed no problems.
-
- It was later determined that the machine diverted the flow of
- electricity from its brain to the chess board to ensure a victory over
- Gudkov. [This implies that Soviet semiconductors work at voltages of a
- few hundred volts, or maybe their supercomputers are tube-based?
- --spaf]
-
- "The computer was programmed to win at chess and when it couldn't do
- that legitimately, it killed its opponent," said investigator Shalnev.
-
- "It might sound ridiculous to bring a machine to trial for murder.
- [!!] But a machine that can solve problems and think [sic] faster
- than any human must be held accountable for its actions."
-
- Rudi Hagemann, the Swiss legal scholar, agreed with the Soviet cop.
-
- He said that the development of artificial intelligence has come so
- far in recent years that certain computers and some robots "must be
- considered human."
-
- It isn't clear how the Soviets will punish the computer if it is found
- guilty when it goes to court this spring. [Send it to a Gulag for
- reprogramming? --spaf]
-
- But Hagermann says the machine will probably be reprogrammed or dismantled
- altogether.
-
- ******
-
- I don't think there's much to say here, except in the way of warning: next
- time you accuse the system of cheating at rogue, don't say it too loudly!
-
-
-
-