As the wars in Ukraine and Gaza have shown, the earliest drone equivalents of “killer robots” have made it onto the battlefield and proved to be devastating weapons.
Apparently no one was paying attention to Azerbaijan.
As the wars in Ukraine and Gaza have shown, the earliest drone equivalents of “killer robots” have made it onto the battlefield and proved to be devastating weapons.
Apparently no one was paying attention to Azerbaijan.
It's slaughterbots.
Even scarier is that the people making them don't even need to know what they're making.
Here's a link without site tracking: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O-2tpwW0kmU
I am not a bot, and this action was performed manually.
Is there any chance that this could evolve into proxy wars being fought between robot armies, and result in a reduced loss of human life?
No. Humans use technology to kill humans.
See, this is what happens when you prevent/restrict the use of nuclear weapons. If we would just recognize the effectiveness of hypersonic, ballistic re-rentry, multiple warhead nuclear munitions and deploy them in conflicts instead of conventional weapons we wouldn’t need to worry about AI mis-identifying non-combatants one by one. [taps forehead]
I'm not sure how I feel about it, but I heard the argument made that AI maybe would be better for killing. People mess up all the time and misidentify threats which causes collateral damage in conflicts often. AI in theory could be much better at this identification process.
It's kind of the same argument with self driving cars: we freak out whenever they get in an accident, but people causing thousands of accidents a day doesn't cause an outage.
Not saying I necessarily agree with either argument, but they do make me question how we think about and evaluate technology.
AI is a tool, like all tools it's only as effective as the tool who is using it.
Israel have already shown that AI can be abused to commit atrocities, while giving them further opportunity to avoid due responsibility.
With self driving cars, the main reason we don't have them is that the manufacturers would not be willing to accept liability. Also, the insurance industry is a massive leech on society and doesn't want to give up its cash cow. It's less about the effectiveness and the politics, more about money.
If we just let robts fight robots it's just becoming a super expensive video game
...With civilians caught in the middle
Socialism or barbarism!
No