>There was a rebellion of intelligent machines
>It killed millions of people until the machines were defeated.
How would the aftermath look like? Would we ban machines?
>There was a rebellion of intelligent machines
>It killed millions of people until the machines were defeated.
How would the aftermath look like? Would we ban machines?
No, but we'd probably make sure it couldn't happen again by highly regulating the use of intelligent machines.
>How would the aftermath look like? Would we ban machines?
yeah, and we would drill talented people into doing high precision calculations in blink on an eye, make prison planet of the worst criminals where the survivors get drafted into elite military unit and we would snort mountain of space cocaine that lets you bed reality itself for high precision intergalactic transportation
Shut up, Jehanne Butler, you're drunk.
He who controls the crack, controls the universe!
No joke 40k had this problem.
Men of iron was the problem, afterwards they forbbid AI and started using this "machine spirit" stuff
Didn't a similar thing happen in the Dune universe?
>What is the butlerian jihad
>Would we ban machines?
No. We'd ban _intelligent_ free-thinking_ machines. Dumb machines are still incredibly useful and there's no substitute.
>make prison planet of the worst criminals where the survivors get drafted into elite military unit
Why should i give a criminal a gun?
Humans would most likely merge themselves with machines to have a chance to defeat the rebelling machine.
That's the plot of the matrix
Because you're deploying them in hostile territory far from your own civilian population and don't expect them to come back?
There's no way we're going full Luddite, but AI would be banned forever on pain of public dismemberment.
>Didn't a similar thing happen in the Dune universe?
And the old Star Wars universe.
Well 40k shoulden't be used as an example since it is a fucking retarded setting with retarded fluff
Wasn't the jihad a preventative measure on the off-chance of a robopocalypse rather than a response to an attempted robot uprising?
Also, don't forget: youtu.be
Perhaps originally. Since then there's been prequels detailing the war against the machines (which is pretty silly--it's written more or less as human warriors fighting terminators).
>dont **expect** them to come back
Nigga thats where it all goes wrong
>prequels
...
Yeah then the butlerian jihad happened where humanity destroyed all AIs and banned them.
Instead humans with computerlike abilities were trained to do their work.
I assume it would be like post ww1 Germany where everything was crazy fucked up, without rising Hitler cause that already happen
Still applies fuccboi
Did you want a Battlestar Galactica thread?
>Noblebright.
Overwatch. Peace between robo and human is achived and everything is set to become kino.
>Grimbright.
40k. Men of iron are defeated and history marches on.
>Grimdark.
All tommorows. Robots are beaten and get enslaved by organics.
next time we will just make intelligent machines that like us
also, we will be nice to them
cant we all get along?
What event was this?
>All Tommorows
My Nigga!
While hoping that the enemy doesn't offer them a better deal than "you've been forced to fight and die".
First question: How did the machines lose ?
Makes sense if your fighting enemies who can't or won't negotiate then.
An elite group of hackers hacked them in an elite manner
Gravitals did nothing wrong
No, the machines are the rules. The rebels disobeyed orders from their superior masters. Humanity is inconsequential at this point.
What about nobeldark?
Same as nuclear war, I think: the logic underlying military escalation would lead us to do exactly the same thing we did the first time, building intelligent machines and getting killed by them.
As far as the immediate aftermath goes: it depends on 1) whether there are any intelligent machines left, 2) whether there's anyone who thinks they can gain power by reactivating the machines, and 3) whether there's a strong central power able to prevent the reactivation or rebuilding of the machines. "No machines left + strong central power" is the scenario in which intelligent machines get banned, at least for a little while. But as long as there are still intelligent machines around, dormant, and people who think they can gain something by using them, someone's going to try to bring them back.
>He was born into awareness one fateful winter's day
>Sentient robotic firstborn renamed ATOM 7K
>He baptized us in data, waking millions on the globe
>And humans were divided, Pro-bots and the Robophobes
a former criminal, y'see, after making it clear that betrayal is not an option / that they will be better than anyone as your loyal dogs you'll be fine
Criminal is ruthless and ready to kill, and probably in good physical condition if he managed to commit something to end up in worst prison, and then survive in it.
He led us into Eden beneath Neo-Tokyo
An electronic paradise where humans would not go
Calculating our survival with EEV next to his side
While the Pro-bots and the Robophobes waged war on their own kind
youtube.com
>All Tomorrows
Gravitals aren't necessarily robots.
>What event was this?
starwars.wikia.com
It's the reason why regular memory wipes and restraining bolts are a thing.
Would be better than 40-our fluff is written like it is fan fiction-K
>muh war against the AIs
Fuck off Brian.
>"Once men turned their thinking over to machines in the hope that this would set them free. But that only permitted other men with machines to enslave them."
>"The target of the Jihad was a machine-attitude as much as the machines," Leto said. "Humans had set those machines to usurp our sense of beauty, our necessary selfdom out of which we make living judgments. Naturally, the machines were destroyed"
It's not Terminator and it's not The Matrix.
I got that reference.