You are trolling and you know it. Just to be clear, what you said was:
First off, consciousness does not equal 'rights' by any means. Do we give rights to ants or rats or badgers?
Yes.
http://www.straypetadvocacy.org/html/cruelty_law_al-mt.html#California
My neighbor has a protected tree growing in his yard that he has to get permission from the city to prune, but that's Los Angeles County for ya.
In Britain, there's a species of ant on the endangered species list.
If a thermostat can be said to be conscious, it is less conscious than all of these.
Really? How do you apply this consciousness test?
Is it really less conscious than a mouse? How do we test? Is a Cray more conscious than a mouse?
And before you bring up animal rights, these only apply to things with nervous systems that can feel pain.
Ah, so a bunch of transistors can be conscious, but you need a nervous system to feel pain?
And I like how the subjective experience of pain managed to find its way back in, free from any "information processing" garbage.
If a thermostat is conscious, then whose to say it doesn't feel pain? Perhaps when the temperature goes above its preset limit for too long the thermostat feels something analagous to pain? Remember, it was not me that opened the door to all this. I don't believe in conscious thermostats. But if you do, then it's a short hop from conscious thermostats to suffering thermostats.
Secondly, we preserve endangered species because once they are gone, they are gone forever, and some people find it important to keep all the animals we can around for enjoyment and/or study. If someone is really interested in a model of thermostat that is no longer in production, they can just make one.
That would apply to endangered species laws. Animal cruelty laws, OTOH, are in place because we don't like it when
conscious things suffer.
But you know all of the above. You made the comment solely to get a reaction out of the crowd by purposely misunderstanding their position. That is the definition of trolling.
I made the comment because it is a consequence of the absurd belief that thermostats are conscious. If they are, then presumably supercomputers are even "more conscious" (they are certainly more complex). If we care about the welfare of complex conscious things (and we do), then we should care about the welfare of a supercomputer.
Unfortunately, I don't think Pixy is going anywhere anytime soon.