Select and discuss two topics below. Respond to posts from other students who have chosen different topics.
Drones and Computers that are Mobile
Describe possible legal legal and liability challenges related to Civilian Drones, Driverless Cars, and Autonomous Robots. Is it right to hold software designers liable if software vulnerabilities cause autonomous drones or cars to veer out of control?
Describe how Bio-Metric devices, such as Google Glass, might affect the cyber-threat landscape.
Maintaining social stability and order and protecting citizens’ lives and properties from infringement are the primary tasks of the local governments. Due to the characteristics of civilian drone technology and applications, the potential public safety risks are increasingly causing concerns among people and governments. In China, a drone interfered airport flights at Chengdu Shuangliu Airport in 2017, which pushed UAV public safety concerns to the forefront and prompted localities to focus on drone flights as an important regulatory target. The hidden danger of public safety caused by UAV flight has become increasingly prominent with the continuous expansion of the application field. Due to a sharp rise in the use of UAV, there exists several potential legal issues connected with the use of drones. Unless the operator has a remote pilot certificate, then Small UAS Rule (Part 107) must be strictly complied with during the entirety of the flight of the UAV. A failure to do so may result in significant civil fines and/or civil action by a private person.
But that’s because I deliberately chose a non-disturbing example. When Einstein invented General Relativity, he had almost no experimental data to go on or a phenomenon to explain, except the precession of Mercury’s perihelion. And Einstein did not use that data, except at the end.
Einstein came up with the theory of Special Relativity using the following principle: You begin by saying, “It doesn’t seem reasonable to me that you can tell, in an enclosed box, how fast you and the box are going. Since this number shouldn’t be observable, it shouldn’t exist in any sense.” You then observe that Maxwell’s Equations invoke a seemingly absolute speed of wave propagation, c, commonly referred to as “the speed of light”. So, you reformulate your physics in such fashion that the absolute speed of a single object no longer meaningfully exists, and only relative speeds exist. I am skipping over quite a bit here, obviously, but the point still remains.
Einstein, having successfully done away with the notion of your absolute speed inside an enclosed room, then set out to do away with the notion of your absolute acceleration inside an enclosed box. It seemed to Einstein that there shouldn’t be a way to differentiate, in an enclosed room, between the room accelerating eastward while the rest of the universe stays still, versus the rest of the universe accelerating westward while the room stays still. And because inertial mass and gravitational masses are exactly equivalent gravity can be viewed as a kind of inertia. The Earth should then go around the Sun in some equivalent of a “straight line”. This requires space-time in the vicinity of the Sun to be curved. And of course, the new theory had to obey Special Relativity, and conserve energy, and conserve momentum, etc.
Einstein spent several years grasping the necessary mathematics to describe curved space-time. Then he wrote down the simplest theory that had the properties Einstein thought it should have—including properties no one had ever observed, but that Einstein thought fit in well with the character of other physical laws.
How impressive was that?
Well, let’s put it this way. In some fraction of alternate Earths proceeding from 1800, perhaps a sizeable fraction, relativistic physics could have developed in an entirely different way. We can imagine that Newton’s original “interpretation” of the motion as relative to an absolute ether prevailed. We can imagine that various corrective factors, themselves unexplained, were added on to Newtonian gravitational mechanics to explain the precession of Mercury—attributed, perhaps, to distortions of the ether. Through the decades, further corrective factors would be added to account for other astronomical observations. Sufficiently precise atomic clocks in airplanes would reveal that time ran a little faster than expected at higher altitudes and more corrective factors would be invented.