Page 7 reminds me of Opisthotonus by Charles Bell.
This manga surprisingly gets the general concept of true AI quite right - consciousness other than our own can't simply have all of its knowledge imparted upon it through programming. Much like a human child, it must be created with the capacity to learn, and then be taught things the old fashioned way, raised with human children, so that it may grow over time and formulate its own thoughts and personality, rather than have a set of rules pre-programmed into it. Not from a coding perspective, but an interaction one. As stated in Chapter 17, a robot with Mamoru's level of learning ability and unique reaction to external stimuli (which descends from Mina's own emerging individuality, as it is spreading to other robots who talk to her) is not something that should be so carelessly built.