A chess-playing robot broke its seven-year-old opponent's finger

 In something out of Black Mirror meets Queen's Gambit, a chess robot coincidentally broke the finger of its seven-year old rival during a display in Moscow, The Guardian revealed. The kid clearly moved his piece too early and the robot snatched his finger and pressed it, causing a break before help could show up. "The robot broke the kid's finger," said Moscow Chess Federation president Sergey Lazarev. "This is obviously terrible."

Video shows the robot getting the kid's finger and holding it for a few seconds a gathering come to free him. It's not satisfactory what turned out badly, however Lazarev said the youngster had "took action, and after that we really want to give time for the robot to reply, yet the kid rushed and the robot got him." He suggested that the robot's providers might require work on the security viewpoints, saying the "must reconsider."

The kid was recognized as Christopher and proceeded to play the following day, completing the competition. His folks, in any case, have purportedly reached the public examiner's office. Russian chess official Sergey Smagin made light of the occurrence, referring to it as "a happenstance" and saying the machine was "totally protected."

Regardless, the occurrence should be visible as a cutting edge story of the risks of robots, even in something as harmless as chess. For a bigger scope with things like mechanical vehicles, notwithstanding, the stakes are extensively higher.

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