ErikJonker, to ai Dutch
@ErikJonker@mastodon.social avatar

Relevant blog, we are not ready for lethal autonomous weapons. Which is a step further then current automatic guided weapons. "Will Fearless and Tireless Robots Lead to More Terrifying Wars?"
@geopolitics
https://warontherocks.com/2024/04/will-fearless-and-tireless-robots-lead-to-more-terrifying-wars/?s=09

remixtures, to ai Portuguese
@remixtures@tldr.nettime.org avatar

#AI #Warfare #AutonomousWeapons #IntelligentWeapons: "It should be of little surprise, then, that states and civil society have taken up the question of intelligent autonomous weapons—weapons that can select and fire upon targets without any human input—as a matter of serious concern. In May, after close to a decade of discussions, parties to the UN’s Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons agreed, among other recommendations, that militaries using them probably need to “limit the duration, geographical scope, and scale of the operation” to comply with the laws of war. The line was nonbinding, but it was at least an acknowledgment that a human has to play a part—somewhere, sometime—in the immediate process leading up to a killing.

But intelligent autonomous weapons that fully displace human decision-making have (likely) yet to see real-world use. Even the “autonomous” drones and ships fielded by the US and other powers are used under close human supervision. Meanwhile, intelligent systems that merely guide the hand that pulls the trigger have been gaining purchase in the warmaker’s tool kit. And they’ve quietly become sophisticated enough to raise novel questions—ones that are trickier to answer than the well-­covered wrangles over killer robots and, with each passing day, more urgent: What does it mean when a decision is only part human and part machine? And when, if ever, is it ethical for that decision to be a decision to kill?"

https://www.technologyreview.com/2023/08/16/1077386/war-machines/

jan_kirsch, to ai

The US Air Force had carried out a virtual test in which an combat drone was controlled by an AI instead of a real person.

The result: the AI decided to kill its superior in the US military!
This is according to a blog entry about an event organised by the Royal Aeronautical Society.

https://www.aerosociety.com/news/highlights-from-the-raes-future-combat-air-space-capabilities-summit/

So much for the concerns about AI being pobulistic and exaggerated.

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