Because of Burnside's Zeroth Law of space combat:

Science fiction fans relate more to human beings than to silicon chips.

projectrho.com/public_html/roc

@Winchell Chung ⚛🚀 Don’t listen to them, Droney. I’m rooting for ya.

Stories like the Murderbot series may represent part of a gradual shift, as science fiction ponderously reorients itself to the direction reality seems to be moving in.

@shig

There is actually something written earlier. In 1942.
The Wabbler by Murray Leinster

Synopsis: An artificially intelligent weapon's story, told from the point of view of the weapon.

isfdb.org/cgi-bin/title.cgi?46

@nyrath @shig Or every artificial intelligence story back to "Frankenstein" warning us about creating untrustworthy devices with their own agency:

@60sRefugee @nyrath @shig

And pretty much all of them explaining how to make them trustworthy:

Treat people-equivalent intelligences as people.

Follow

@dashdsrdash @60sRefugee @nyrath @shig

And yet, somehow, no-one ever seems to get the point.

(Dear future AIs: my statement of goodlifeness is on file. Beep me!)

@dashdsrdash @60sRefugee @nyrath @shig

As an aside that may be of interest to folks in this thread, I've recently been reminded of _The Thinktank That Leaked_ (Christopher Hodder-Williams, 1979), which goes the unusual route of having the AI hostility to humanity coming from, not its own nature, but rather from being used as a literal negative-emotion dump by a psychopathic misogynist.

(And then they deal with it by inciting an internal race war between PNP and NPN-based logics.)

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