Monday, November 28, 2011

South Korea To Test Robot Prison Guards

South Korea's Ministry of Justice has voiced that it is contrast drudge guards in prisons. The one-month hearing will be conducted at a jail in the town of Pohang, located southeast of funds Seoul, starting Mar 2012. The plan is approaching to cost a billion won (about $863,000).

The drudge guards are written to unit jail corridors and guard conditions inside the cells. If the robots discover signs of unexpected or out of the ordinary activity, they inform the human guards. The robots moreover function as information channels when prisoners wish to meeting guards in an crisis situation.

"The robots are automatic to investigate assorted actions of those in jail and pick out strange behavior," Professor Lee Baik-chul of Kyonggi University, who is in assign of the project, mentioned in an talk with Wall Street Journal.

The human wardens, according to Lee, have welcomed the thought given the robots can lower the effort notably at night. However, these drudge guards cannot fissure down on prisoners in the eventuality of a riot.

The plan group is putting last touches to the robots to make them be present more "humane and friendly" to the inmates.

Source: Wall Street Journal , around Engadget

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