UT Austin's Luis Sentis is leading a landmark study of how robots make us feel and setting the standards for how autonomous machines will share our spaces.
Kiwi and Mango are small and plush, resemble a cross between Teletubbies and WALL-E, and have technology that allows them to move, learn, speak and recognize faces and voices.
If passed, a new bill would ban making, using, or selling robots with mounted weapons and prohibit police from using those machines to restrain people.
dangerous. so we need ethical rules of what the robot, what robots in general are able to say or are allowed to say, so there should be a governance in this. we cannot let robots going yeah, absolutely. well, listen, what we re seeing mow, this is clearly only the beginning but we appreciate this window into the future. nadia talman, thank you so much for speaking with us. thank you. all right. still ahead, this week, the planet saw its four hottest days on record, the latest evidence the earth is heating up much faster than expected and another wake-up call in the climate crisis. stay with us.