BBS:      TELESC.NET.BR
Assunto:  George Mlis tried to warn us about an AI robot uprising 130 years
De:       Mike Powell
Data:     Tue, 14 Apr 2026 08:22:44 -0500
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 * Originally in: SF_Classic

George Mlis tried to warn us about an AI robot uprising 130 years ago, and 
I'm not surprised

Date:
Mon, 13 Apr 2026 17:30:00 +0000

Description:
A long-lost George Mlis depicts exactly the kind of human-robot interaction 
you don't want to see.

FULL STORY
A showman powers up a robot, which then grows out of control and attacks him.
It's a familiar theme, perhaps the plot of any number of 20th and 
21st-century robot tales, but this one is from 1897. 

We've been obsessed with humanoid robots for a long time, more than a century 
in fact. While most credit Czech writer Karel apek with coining the term 
"robot" in 1920, we now have evidence of a robot run amok from one of film's 
first artists: George Mlis. Lasting a mere 45 seconds, the silent film 
appears to depict an inventor who powers up (or hand cranks to generate some 
kind of energy) and stick-weilding clown automaton (a.k.a. robot) that starts 
the size of a child but with each crank grows until it's an adult-size clown 
robot.  The robot then quickly turns on its
owner, whacking him in the head. Naturally, the showman panics, grabs a huge 
mallet, and whacks the robot back through its growth spurts until it's a 
child, then what appears to be a small statue, which the showman smashes (or 
it vanishes; it's hard to tell). Okay, it's a fairly thin story, but what do 
you expect in 45 seconds?

I'd argue the original story is a bit more 
fascinating. The previously thought lost Mlis' film (better known for 1989's 
The Man in the Moon ) showed up at the doorstep of the US National 
Audio-Visual Conservation Center for the US Library of Congress, which has 
some expertise in recovering and digitizing nitrate film. 

In fact, older nitrate film tends to hold up better than newer, less 
flammable media like cellulose acetate. The Library of Congress verified the 
authenticity and quickly realized it was Mlis' "Gugusse and the Automaton."

The Library of Congress explains the entire saga of how it was found and 
preserved in an Instagram post.

You can watch the film (in the article link below).

Considering Mlis made the first and still referenced space movie, I wouldn't 
call the multi-hyphenate director anti-science or tech. On the other hand, 
the science in his Moon film is not exactly Hail Mary- accurate. 

It's also fair to assume Mlis was thinking more about automatons (albeit a 
super-intelligent one) that were popular in that era. These 19th-century toys 
used complex gears and pocket-watch-level engineering to create an imitation 
of life.  Still, this idea that an automaton would turn on its
maker is the first early inkling we have of a robot uprising, one that is 
quickly squelched, of course. 

There's obviously no concept of AI, but the automaton in this clip does have 
some self-determination. After all, it decides to attack its creators. 

Now, almost 130 years later, we're grappling with the very real possibility 
that AI-powered robots or AI models might do something we don't expect, or 
even act in their own self-interests and ones that are at odds with humanity. 

Just look at what Anthropic's unreleased Claude Mythos code just did. As we 
reported last week , the model exhibited "'strategic manipulation,' 
'concealment,' and other behaviors that didnt always surface in the models 
responses.'" 

In other words, it whacked its creators, and they took a giant hammer to it 
to shut it down  for now.

Link to news story:
https://www.techradar.com/ai-platforms-assistants/george-melies-tried-to-warn-
us-about-an-ai-robot-uprising-130-years-ago-and-im-not-surprised

$$
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 * Origin: Capitol City Hub (1:2320/105)

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