A federal judge, Leonie Brinkema has ruled in a US Patent and Trademark case , that Robots or AI computers cannot apply for Patents. (Sept. 2021)... Stephan Thaler founder of Imagination Engines plans to appeal ...
@ogb saidWhen robots start ruling, those judges will be running for their lives and their law enforcement personnel will be crying and peeing in their pants.
A federal judge, Leonie Brinkema has ruled in a US Patent and Trademark case , that Robots or AI computers cannot apply for Patents. (Sept. 2021)... Stephan Thaler founder of Imagination Engines plans to appeal ...
@ogb saidDo you have a link to that ruling to discuss that?
A federal judge, Leonie Brinkema has ruled in a US Patent and Trademark case , that Robots or AI computers cannot apply for Patents. (Sept. 2021)... Stephan Thaler founder of Imagination Engines plans to appeal ...
@ponderable saidSorry, I don't know how to put a link in a post..but just DuckGo "AI patents denied" and several articles will come up...
Do you have a link to that ruling to discuss that?
@ogb saidyou go to the adress space of your browser copy the adress and display it here:
Sorry, I don't know how to put a link in a post..but just DuckGo "AI patents denied" and several articles will come up...
@ogb saidIt is a long time that computers do the calculations for us.
@Ponderable
what is important to me is a human just couldn't do the designs/calculations required to "invent" , say, a new medical scanner. Something that detects information vastly superior to what had been done before. In that case an AI machine should truly get "credit for" its own invention...
@ogb saidThere is fundamental legal issue at stake here, and the ruling is correct. As soon as AI (i.e., a machine) can be held liable for damages, THEN we can start talking about giving AI 'credit' for an invention. A private person or a corporation can be held liable (you might recall the case against the manufacturer of thalidomide (deformed babies), for example). As soon as a machine suffers if it's put in prison or forced to forego other privileges, or pay a fine, then we can start talking about granting machines patents.
@Ponderable
what is important to me is a human just couldn't do the designs/calculations required to "invent" , say, a new medical scanner. Something that detects information vastly superior to what had been done before. In that case an AI machine should truly get "credit for" its own invention...
@ogb saidIf a robot or some AI system ever asked for a patent, it would be because the programmer told it too. It isn't like either do anything outside of their programming because they feel like it.
A federal judge, Leonie Brinkema has ruled in a US Patent and Trademark case , that Robots or AI computers cannot apply for Patents. (Sept. 2021)... Stephan Thaler founder of Imagination Engines plans to appeal ...
@kellyjay saidCorrect. There is no reason to think that a computer or any similar AI system, however complex, has any more inner-felt experience or conscience than an alarm clock or a diesel motor, and therefore nothing which could suffer remorse for bad consequences of its actions.
If a robot or some AI system ever asked for a patent, it would be because the programmer told it too. It isn't like either do anything outside of their programming because they feel like it.