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Archive for the ‘military’ category: Page 18

Dec 8, 2023

The Pentagon is moving toward letting AI weapons autonomously decide to kill humans

Posted by in categories: drones, military, robotics/AI

The use of drones capable of deciding whether to kill humans is alarming critics.

Dec 8, 2023

Why is the US ramping up production of plutonium ‘pits’ for nuclear weapons?

Posted by in category: military

The Pentagon is concerned about the US nuclear arsenal’s viability, but critics worry about a renewed arms race.

Dec 8, 2023

Space Development Agency aims high for 2024 after strong 2023 start

Posted by in categories: military, satellites

WASHINGTON — The Space Development Agency has set its sights on an ambitious launch schedule for 2024 following two successful launches this year that marked steady progress for the fledgling U.S. Space Force agency.

“Starting next September, it’s an 11-launch campaign over 11 months, one launch a month,” SDA Director Derek Tournear said Dec. 7 at a National Security Space Association online forum.

SDA is developing a network of satellites known as the Proliferated Warfighter Space Architecture — a large constellation of lower-cost, mass-produced satellites in low Earth orbit. This is different from the traditional DoD approach of using small numbers of expensive, highly-customized satellites.

Dec 7, 2023

Stealing fire from the gods: Artificial Intelligence and the evolution of thought

Posted by in categories: cyborgs, military, robotics/AI

The feeling that we belong to something much larger and deeper than ourselves has long been a common human experience. Palaeontologist and Jesuit priest Teilhard de Chardin wrote about “a noosphere” of cognitive realisation evolving towards an “Omega point” of divine planetary spiritualisation. But it is hard to envisage that ever occurring. It is easier to envisage that we belong in an evolving intelligent power that has entered a momentous posthuman dimension though artificial intelligence.

Some futurists believe we are on the way to realising a posthuman world in which we will live on as cyborgs, or in some new embodiment of intelligent power that will absorb and supersede human intelligence. It is no longer fanciful to foresee a future in which we will have everyday interactions with androids that are powered by artificial general intelligence. They will look, move, and seem to think and respond like a human person, be skilled in simulating emotional responses realistically, and greatly out-perform us in mental activities and manual tasks. It may be we will regard them only as tools or mechanical assistants. But from their expression of human-like behaviours we may become attached to them, even to the extent of according them rights. Their design will have to ensure they don’t carry any threat, but will we be able to trust fully that this will remain the case given their technical superiority? And how far can we trust that the military, malicious groups, and rogue states won’t develop androids trained to kill people and destroy property? We know only too well about our human propensity for violent conflict.

It would be ironic if, to gain more power and control over the world, we used our human intelligence to create AI systems and devices which, for all the benefits they bring, end up managing our lives to our detriment, or even controlling us. And irony, as Greek dramatists were well aware, is often a component of fate.

Dec 5, 2023

AUKAS allies plan AI-power to pinpoint China’s stealth submarines

Posted by in categories: military, robotics/AI

Under a new announcement, AUKUS members have unveiled their plans to make use of advanced AI to hunt for Chinese submarines.


Took-ranch/Wikimedia Commons.

Continue reading “AUKAS allies plan AI-power to pinpoint China’s stealth submarines” »

Dec 4, 2023

Can Palmer Luckey Reinvent the U.S. Defense Industry?

Posted by in category: military

Military tech startup Anduril Industries is shaking up the U.S. defense industry as it is one of the few privately held technology companies finding success as a Defense Department contractor. But what makes the company’s software so unique that it is being used across multiple branches of the U.S. military and in both the Russia-Ukraine War and Israel-Hamas War?

WSJ explains how this startup is operating in order to disrupt the U.S. defense industry.

Continue reading “Can Palmer Luckey Reinvent the U.S. Defense Industry?” »

Dec 4, 2023

China, US agree on AI risks, but can they see past military tech rivalry?

Posted by in categories: military, robotics/AI

US-China consensus on regulating the military use of AI mentions no specifics, amid challenge posed by the lack of a common definition for such systems Mutual vulnerability could still push the rival powers to create a common set of binding regulations, observers say.

Dec 2, 2023

The AI military race is led by American tech. Is there a challenger?

Posted by in categories: military, robotics/AI

America calls and raises the AI bet with the B-21 Raider stealth bomber.


U.S Air Force.

This incident, whose timing peculiarly lined up with Chinese Premier Xi Jinping’s visit to the United States, caused China to suddenly change tact and want to talk about nukes and AI.

Continue reading “The AI military race is led by American tech. Is there a challenger?” »

Dec 1, 2023

US regulator compels Aramco to divest Altman-backed AI chip startup

Posted by in categories: finance, military, robotics/AI

Prosperity7, the venture capital fund of Aramco Ventures, invested in Rain Neuromorphics in February 2022.


Wikimedia Commons.

Moving aggressively in the AI arms race, Washington has compelled Saudi Aramco to sell its shares in Rain Neuromorphics Inc, an AI chip startup backed by OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, reported Bloomberg.

Continue reading “US regulator compels Aramco to divest Altman-backed AI chip startup” »

Nov 30, 2023

The Military’s Big Bet on Artificial Intelligence

Posted by in categories: drones, military, robotics/AI, space

Number 4 Hamilton Place is a be-columned building in central London, home to the Royal Aeronautical Society and four floors of event space. In May, the early 20th-century Edwardian townhouse hosted a decidedly more modern meeting: Defense officials, contractors, and academics from around the world gathered to discuss the future of military air and space technology.

Things soon went awry. At that conference, Tucker Hamilton, chief of AI test and operations for the United States Air Force, seemed to describe a disturbing simulation in which an AI-enabled drone had been tasked with taking down missile sites. But when a human operator started interfering with that objective, he said, the drone killed its operator, and cut the communications system.

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