Robot fanatic here. Even if nobody really cares about my topics, I hope this article would give some insight to the possible future ahead.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/6200005.stm
I think 20-50 years is kinda too early to think about Robot rights. I don't think we are THAT far in artificial intelligence science that robots would boot up tomorrow and say "Does my job offer retirement benefits for me?"
Although, I think it's scary that technology and science are coming so close to blurring what has life and doesn't, if Robots do have some way of thinking, they deserve rights. But... "thinking" is such a vague and subjective definition. This topic goes back to what makes humans, human? Or even better, what makes animals, animal? Animals have rights. They don't need to be at the same intelligence as humans to get rights. If robots could reach a extent of thinking what a dog, bird, or even a fish could do, I would bet someone would protest for rights for robots.
I'm not sure really if I would support or decline rights. It's confusing...
Would you give Megaman health care?




