Ciao robot, The Birth of Roboethics, a documentary film.
Author: Gianmarco Veruggio, Manuel Stefanolo
Director: Manuel Stefanolo
Scientific Advisor: Gianmarco Veruggio, Fiorella Operto
Editor: Manuel Stefanolo
Photography: Tommaso Miglio
Music: Methodo
Sound: Piero Trofa, Mirko ZucchettoProduction:
Scuola di Robotica/Wodan Produzioni
Italy53 min. 2008
Roboethics is a fast growing field with a focus on studying the ethical, economic and social aspects of the age of robots. To create awareness of the issues before it is too late, Ciao Robot is a documentary currently under production and featuring a number of prominent scientists discussing the relevant issues.
Robots are the most powerful machines ever built and soon they will be used in all fields. Though they are already playing a key role in the lives of some individuals, thanks to mass production and ongoing technical advances they are destined to change the lives of many.
Ciao Robot tells the story of some people who collaborate or live with a machine, such as disabled athletes with limb prostheses: in this area, such advanced results have been achieved that it is currently debated whether these athletes may be able to perform better than normally-abled people.
Robots have become a precious aid for civil defence, as happened during relief operations after 9/11. What’s more, robotic surgery - which is already being successfully performed for some procedures - seems bound to become widely implemented because it ensures highly positive and precise outcomes and is minimally invasive.
And now even the war industry is increasingly focusing on robots …
Through the testimony of some of the most prominent robotics experts of the world (Veruggio, Inoue, Siciliano, Takanishi, Arkin, Murphy, Dario, Christensen, etc.) this documentary also tries to investigate what the next developments in the field of ‘smart machines’ will be and what scenarios they may lead to. Will humankind be capable of using this technology with wisdom? World-wide scientists, philosophers and artists were asked to give an answer, including US writer Bruce Sterling, Belgian physicist Jean-Pierre Stroot, Spanish philosopher José Maria Galvan, science historian Paolo Rossi and others.