The IA implications of ramps replacing stairs
The world is changing now.
Ramps may replace stairs in homes and businesses to facilitate access to domestic robots. (Pure speculation on my part, this.)
Domestic robots charged with cleaning and other duties will be equipped with CCTV cameras. (Already exist and offered as a commercial service.)
Some bright lass or lad will equip these domestic robots with prosthetic arms for manipulating objects on command–or autonomously (already exist and working in the lab).
In addition to opening doors and pulling levers, etc., those arms will be able to manipulate tasers or pepper-spray projectors. Domestic robots will then have security responsibilities.
However, to prevent misuse and frivolous use, it is quite possible that the use of robots for security purposes must involve an enabling command from a certified security operator or even a law-enforcement agency, looped in on the feed from the robot’s CCTV camera. It might be a dual decision, with the security operator enabling the owner to actuate the device.
Which of course means the integrity and authenticity of all messaging must be iron-clad–encrypted, authenticated and secure.
So when, 10 years down the line, you are choosing which type of wood to use in the ramp that replaces your stairs, remember the information assurance implications.
And just in case you think this is too futuristic and science-fictiony to worry about, have a look at the first private spaceport–due to be finished in 2010–before Crossrail.
Hat tip to Robert Heinlein’s Door Into Summer, 1957.

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