The aircraft flew up to speeds of 1,200mph. DARPA did not reveal which aircraft won the dogfight.

    • Asafum@feddit.nl
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      3 months ago

      Oh 100%.

      If the options are “make gigantic profit” or “do what’s right for the future of humanity” do you even need to ask what we’re going to do?

      • Siegfried@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        Not at all, but it kind of bugs me how Asimov’s perception of the future weighted so much fear towards AI over profit.

  • Sam_Bass@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Only cookies youre gonna get me to voluntarily accept are oatmeal raisin, so imma have to pass

  • AutoTL;DR@lemmings.worldB
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    3 months ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    In a drill over Edwards Air Force Base, the pair of F-16 fighter jets flew at speeds of up to 1,200mph and got as close as 600 metres during aerial combat, also known as dogfighting.

    While in flight, the AI algorithm relies on analysing historical data to make decisions for present and future situations, according to the Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), which carried out the test.

    This process is called “machine learning”, and has for years been tested in simulators on the ground, said DARPA, a research and development agency of the US Department of Defense.

    In 2020, so-called “AI agents” defeated human pilots in simulations in all five of their match-ups - but the technology needed to be run for real in the air.

    Pilots were on board the X-62A in case of emergency, but they didn’t need to revert controls at any point during the test dogfight, which took place in September last year and was announced this week.

    "The potential for autonomous air-to-air combat has been imaginable for decades, but the reality has remained a distant dream up until now, said Secretary of the Air Force Frank Kendall.


    The original article contains 455 words, the summary contains 193 words. Saved 58%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!

  • Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    AI will win if not now, then soon. The reason is that even if it is worse than a human, the AI can pull off maneuvers that would black out a human.

    Jets are far more powerful than humans are capable of controlling. Flight suits and training can only do so much to keep the pilot from blacking out.

    • NegativeLookBehind@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Jets are far more powerful than humans are capable of controlling.

      I think the same will eventually be true for AI, especially when you give it weapons

    • Buelldozer@lemmy.today
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      3 months ago

      AI will win if not now, then soon.

      This article didn’t mention it but the AI pilot did win at least one of the engagements during this testing run.

      • tal@lemmy.today
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        3 months ago

        Not that that isn’t interesting, but I’d jump in and insert a major caution here.

        I don’t know what is being done here, but a lot of the time, wargaming and/or military exercises are presented in the media as being an evaluation of which side/equipment/country is better in a “who would win” evaluation.

        I’ve seen several prominent folks familiar with these warn about misinterpreting these, and I’d echo that now.

        That is often not the purpose of actual exercises or wargames. They may be used to test various theories, and may place highly unlikely constraints on one side that favor it or the other.

        So if someone says “the US fought China in a series of wargames in the Taiwan Strait and the US/China won in N wargames”, that may or may not be because the wargame planners were trying to find out who is likely to win an actual war, and may or may not have much to to with the expectations the planners have of a win in a typical scenario. They might be trying to find out what would happen in a particular scenario that they are working on and how to plan for that scenario. They may have structured things in a way that are not representative of what they expect to likely come up.

        To pull up an example, here’s a fleet exercise that the US ran against a simulated German fleet between World War I and II:

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fleet_problem

        Fleet Problem III and Grand Joint Army-Navy Exercise No. 2

        During Fleet Problem III, the Scouting Force, designated the “Black Force,” transited from its homeport in the Chesapeake Bay towards the Panama Canal from the Caribbean side. Once in the Caribbean, the naval forces involved in Fleet Problem III joined with the 15th Naval District and the Army’s Panama Division in a larger joint exercise.[9] The Blue force defended the canal from an attack from the Caribbean by the Black force, operating from an advance base in the Azores. This portion of the exercise also aimed to practice amphibious landing techniques and transiting a fleet rapidly through the Panama Canal from the Pacific side.[10]

        Black Fleet’s intelligence officers simulated a number of sabotage operations during the course of Fleet Problem III. On January 14, Lieutenant Hamilton Bryan, Scouting Force’s Intelligence Officer, personally landed in Panama with a small boat. Posing as a journalist, he entered the Panama Canal Zone. There, he “detonated” a series of simulated bombs in the Gatun Locks, control station, and fuel depot, along with simulating sabotaging power lines and communications cables throughout the 16th and 17th, before escaping to his fleet on a sailboat.

        On the 15th, one of Bryan’s junior officers, Ensign Thomas Hederman, also snuck ashore to the Miraflores Locks. He learned the Blue Fleet’s schedule of passage through the Canal from locals, and prepared to board USS California (BB-44), but turned back when he spotted classmates from the United States Naval Academy - who would have recognized and questioned him - on deck. Instead, he boarded USS New York (BB-34), the next ship in line, disguised as an enlisted sailor. After hiding overnight, he emerged early on the morning of the 17th, bluffed his way into the magazine of the No. 3 turret, and simulated blowing up a suicide bomb - just as the battleship was passing through the Culebra Cut, the narrowest portion of the Panama Canal. This “sank” New York, and blocked the Canal, leading the exercise arbiters to rule a defeat of the Blue Force and end that year’s Grand Joint Army-Navy Exercise.[11][10] Fleet Problem III was also the first which USS Langley (CV-1) took part in, replacing some of the simulated aircraft carriers used in Fleet Problem I.[12]

        That may be a perfectly reasonable way of identifying potential weaknesses in Panama Canal transit, but the planners may not have been aiming for the overall goal of evaluating whether, in the interwar period, Germany or the US would likely win in an overall war. Saying that the Black Fleet defeated the Blue Fleet in terms of the rules of the exercise doesn’t mean that Germany would necessarily win an overall war; evaluating that isn’t the purpose of the exercise. If, afterwards, an article says “US wargames show that interwar Germany would most likely defeat the US in a war”, that may not be very accurate.

        For the case OP is seeing, it may not even be the case that the exercise planners expect it to be likely for two warplanes to get within dogfighting range. We also do not know what, if any, constraints were placed on either side.

    • BrightCandle@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Not so much f16s but the more modern planes can do 16G where the pilot can’t really do more than 9G. But once unshackled from a pilot a lot of instrument weight and pilot survival can be stripped from a plane design and the airframe built to withstand much more, with titanium airframes I see no reason we can’t make planes do sustained unstable turns in excess of 20G.

    • GBU_28@lemm.ee
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      3 months ago

      Plus the ai has no risk, outside of basic operation.

      Humans have an inherent survival instinct to which drones can just say “lol send the next one I’m dying cya”

      • Aatube@kbin.melroy.orgOP
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        3 months ago

        Jets are a lot more expensive. What’s at risk is all these resources for the jet going down the drain.

        • everyone_said@lemmy.world
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          I’d imagine they’d evetually design a jet purpose built for an AI that would be a lot cheaper than a human-oriented one. Removing the need for a cockpit with seats, displays, controls, oxygen, etc would surely reduce cost. It would also open the door for innovations in air-frame design previously impossible.

        • GBU_28@lemm.ee
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          Huh? Jets are far more replaceable than a human operator who takes years of training and has “needs”.

          Ya know unless your military is running on cold war fumes or something and you can’t afford to build an airframe you already have in production

          • diffusive@lemmy.world
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            3 months ago

            Training a combat pilot used to cost (in early 2000, not sure now) 10M€ for a NATO member.

            Find me a modern jet that costs so little. Regardless of what politicians say, human life has a price… and it is waaaay below a jet (even including the training)

            • grue@lemmy.world
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              3 months ago

              Yeah, but procurement of a combat pilot has about a two-decade lead time. You can build more jets a lot quicker (potentially even including the R&D phase).

              • intensely_human@lemm.ee
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                3 months ago

                Also as this war expands to become planet-wide, industrial output of drones will expand many orders of magnitude.

            • GBU_28@lemm.ee
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              3 months ago

              It’s not just money. It’s time, public perception, quantity trainers, quantity student seats etc

              A drone is ready the moment it comes off the assembly line, is flashed with software, and tested.

      • intensely_human@lemm.ee
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        3 months ago

        To fight optimally, AI needs to have a survival instinct too.

        Evolution didn’t settle on “protect my life at all costs” as our default instinct, simply by chance. It did so because it’s the best strategy in a hostile environment.

        • maynarkh@feddit.nl
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          3 months ago

          It’s the best strategy because it takes decades to make a fully functional human, and you need humans to make more humans, plus there is the issue of genetically sustainable population sizes, etc. A fully functional aeroplane can be made much quicker, in a factory that can spit out several of them in a day. They are more expendable.

        • Turun@feddit.de
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          3 months ago

          Only if the goal is reproduction. You need to survive to reproduce.

          If the goal is maximum damage for the least amount of economic cost then a suicide (anthropomorphizing the drone here) can very much make sense.

          No one would argue that a sword is better than guns or bombs, because you still have the sword after attacking.

    • circuscritic@lemmy.ca
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      3 months ago

      Maneuverability is much less of a factor now as BVR engagements and stealth have taken over.

      But, yeah, in general a pilot that isn’t subject to physical constraints can absolutely out maneuver a human by a wide margin.

      The future generation will resemble a Protoss Carrier sans the blimp appearance. Human controllers in 5th and 6th gen airframes who direct multiple AI wingman, or AI swarms.

    • Gigan@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Jets are far more powerful than humans are capable of controlling. Flight suits and training can only do so much to keep the pilot from blacking out.

      Can they be piloted remotely? Or would that be too dangerous with latency

      • psud@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        Yes they can. Before AI the US was expecting to move to remote piloted jets

          • psud@lemmy.world
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            3 months ago

            That’s not the case yet for fighters, just things like predator drones and global hawk

            So really just surveillance and delivery of a couple of light air to surface missiles, most reported on for assassinations

      • intensely_human@lemm.ee
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        3 months ago

        Latency, signal interference, and limited human intelligence are all limiting factors in that strategy.

        If the enemy interferes with any of those, the enemy wins.

        This was is already being fought with autonomous drones. By the end of it, the robots will be unrecognizable to us now.

        • grue@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          What’s the difference? A remotely or AI-piloted fighter jet is just a big drone.

          • Aatube@kbin.melroy.orgOP
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            3 months ago

            Drones are designed without cockpits. Retrofitting remote-control into an F-16 does not seem like the best choice to me.

            • azuth@sh.itjust.works
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              3 months ago

              Retrofitting F-16s to become drones (whether rc or ai-controlled) as well as designing a variant ditching human support for weight and monetary gains is the rational choice as long as non stealth aircraft are viable. In that case you’d stick to F-35s.

              It makes no sense to waste billions worth of perfectly capable and proven airframes, engines and avionics. Any future drone that will have at least the same level of capabilities as an f-16 will cost practically cost the same. At the cost of high performance aircraft life support does not add that much cost to a plane, pilot costs (and availability) are a much bigger issue.

  • IninewCrow@lemmy.ca
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    3 months ago

    AI has a already won in these confrontations

    Surface To Air missile made human piloted aircraft obsolete.

    All that’s needed now are a bunch of missiles, plug into an AI program and let it run by itself.

    Why would militaries invest in a billion dollar aircraft piloted by a highly trained aircraft pilot with years of training that cost millions of dollars that is probably paid millions over many years … when the pilot and his aircraft can be shot down by a $100,000 missile. If you can’t do it with one missile, send three, four or ten, it’s still cheaper than matching them with an aircraft and pilot.

    Instead of investing in expensive aircraft and pilots, all a defending country can do is just spend the same amount of money and surround their country with anti aircraft missiles controlled by AI systems.

    • Buelldozer@lemmy.today
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      Why would militaries invest in a billion dollar aircraft piloted by a highly trained aircraft pilot with years of training that cost millions of dollars that is probably paid millions over many years … when the pilot and his aircraft can be shot down by a $100,000 missile.

      1. Force projection.
      2. It ain’t that easy to shoot down stealth aircraft.
      3. Missiles that can successfully shoot down stealth aircraft cost several million dollars each.
      4. Ground launch systems that can target and engage stealth aircraft, like the US Patriot System, are so horrifically expensive that no nation can afford enough of them to cover more than a fraction of its airspace. That means you need aircraft capable of engaging incoming enemy targets.

      In short you are hideously naive.

      • chakan2@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        How do you deploy manned fighters against an aircraft you can’t detect?

        Edit: As to not downing the aircraft. That’s irrelevant. It wouldn’t matter if it’s an air to air missile or ground to air…you just fire more.

        I can buy thousands of rockets for the cost of a single F22 or F16.

        • Buelldozer@lemmy.today
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          How do you deploy manned fighters against an aircraft you can’t detect?

          Detect and target aren’t the same thing. There’s various Air Defense platforms that can detect stealth air craft but they lack the resolution necessary to target them. For targetting the launch platform has to be a lot closer.

          I can buy thousands of rockets for the cost of a single F22 or F16.

          Annnd were back to the Air Defense platforms being hideously expensive. Literally no one can afford enough of them to cover more than a tiny fraction of their air space.

          Forget “thousands” of missiles any country larger than a Lichtenstein would to need to buy millions of them along with enough Ground Detection and Launch Stations to cover their entire border. Utterly and totally unaffordable.

  • inb4_FoundTheVegan@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    One step closer to machine domination.

    Like, not even in a joking sense. Ukraine is using a ton of drones, the future of physical warfare will simply be a test resources and production.

    I’m honestly not sure if this will be good or bad in the longterm. Absolutely saving any amount of human life is a good thing, but when that is no longer a significant factor, I wonder if we will go to (and stay at) war for more trivial reasons.

    • xor@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      3 months ago

      I’m hoping that the sheer cost of executing that sort of war will continue to be a prohibiting factor like it is today

  • KeenFlame@feddit.nu
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    3 months ago

    I am a FIRM believer in any automated kill without a human pulling the trigger is a war crime

    Yes mines yes uavs yes yes yes

    It is a crime against humanity

    Stop

    • DreamlandLividity@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      You mean it should be a war crime, right? Or is there some treaty I am unaware of?

      Also, why? I don’t necessarily disagree, I am just curious about your reasoning.

      • i_love_FFT@lemmy.ml
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        3 months ago

        Mines are designated war crimes by the Geneva convention Ottawa treaty because of the indiscriminate killing. Many years ago, good human right lawyers could have extended that to drones… (Source: i had close friends in international law)

        But i feel like now the tides have changed and tech companies have influenced the general population to think that ai is good enough to prevent “indiscriminate” killing.

        Edit: fixed the treaty name, thanks!

        • tal@lemmy.today
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          3 months ago

          Mines are designated war crimes by the Geneva convention

          Use of mines is not designated a war crime by the Geneva Convention.

          Some countries are members of a treaty that prohibits the use of some types of mines, but that is not the Geneva Convention.

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ottawa_Treaty

        • DreamlandLividity@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          Mines are not part of what people refer to as the Geneva conventions. There is a separate treaty specifically banning some landmines, that was signed by a lot of countries but not really any that mattered.

      • KeenFlame@feddit.nu
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        3 months ago

        Yes

        Because it is a slippery slope and dangerous to our future existence as a species

          • KeenFlame@feddit.nu
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            3 months ago

            First it is enemy tanks. Then enemy air. Then enemy boats and vehicles, then foot soldiers and when these weapons are used the same happens to their enemy. Then at last one day all humans are killed

      • Hacksaw@lemmy.ca
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        3 months ago

        Not OP, but if you can’t convince a person to kill another person then you shouldn’t be able to kill them anyways.

        There are points in historical conflicts, from revolutions to wars, when the very people you picked to fight for your side think “are we the baddies” and just stop fighting. This generally leads to less deaths and sometimes a more democratic outcome.

        If you can just get a drone to keep killing when any reasonable person would surrender you’re empowering authoritarianism and tyranny.

        • n3m37h@sh.itjust.works
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          3 months ago

          Take WWI Christmas when everyone got out of the trenches and played some football (no not American foot touches the ball 3x a game)

          It almost ended the war

          • KeenFlame@feddit.nu
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            3 months ago

            Yes the humanity factor is vital

            Imagine the horrid destructive cold force of automated genocide, it can not be met by anything other than the same or worse and at that point we are truly doomed

            Because there will then be no one that can prevent it anymore

            It must be met with worse opposition than biological warfare did after wwI, hopefully before tragedy

    • NeatNit@discuss.tchncs.de
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      3 months ago

      I see this as a positive: when both sides have AI unmanned planes, we get cool dogfights without human risk! Ideally over ocean or desert and with Hollywood cameras capturing every second in exquisite detail.

    • antidote101@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      What if the human is pulling the trigger to “paint the target” and tag it for hunt and destroy then the drone goes and kills it? Because that’s how lots of missles already work. So where’s the line?

      • KeenFlame@feddit.nu
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        3 months ago

        The line is where an automatic process target and execute a human being. When it is automated. The arming of a device is not sufficient to warrant a human interaction, and as such mines are also not allowed.

        This should in my opinion always have been the case. Mines are indiscriminate and have proven to be wildly inhumane in several ways. Significantly, innocents are often killed.

        But mines don’t paint the picture of what automated slaughter can lead to.

        The point has been laid that when the conscious mind has to kill, it makes war have an important way to end, in the mind.

        The dangers extend well beyond killing innocent targets, another part is the coldness of allowing a machine to decide, that is beyond morally corrupt. There is something terrifying about the very idea that facing one of these weapons, there is nothing to negotiate, the cold calculations that want to kill you are not human. It is a place where no human ever wants to be. But war is horrible. It’s the escalation of automated triggers that can lead to exponential death with no remorse which is just a terrible danger.

        The murder weapons has nobody’s intent behind them, except very far back, in the arming and the program. It open for scenarios where mass murder becomes easy and terrifyingly cold.

        Kind of like the prisoner’s dilemma shows us, that when war escalates, it can quickly devolve into revenge narratives, and when either side has access to cold impudent kills, they will use them. This removes even more humanity from the acts and the violence can reach new heights beyond our comprehension.

        Weapons of mass destruction with automated triggers will eventually seal our existence if we don’t abolish it with impunity. It has been seen over and over how the human factor is the only grace that ever end or contain war. Without this component I think we are just doomed to have the last intent humans ever had was revenge, and the last emotions fear and complete hopelessness.

        • antidote101@lemmy.world
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          Well, that’s all very idealistic, but it’s likely not going to happen.

          Israel already used AI to pick bombing sites, those bombs and missiles would have been programmed with altitudes and destinations (armed) then dropped. The pilots only job these days is to avoid interception, fly over the bombing locations, tag the target when acquired, and drop them. Most of this is already done in software.

          Eventually humans will leave the loop because unlike self-driving cars, these technologies won’t risk the lives of the aggressor’s citizens.

          If the technology is seen as unstoppable enough, there may be calls for warnings to be given, but I suspect that’s all the mercy that will be shown…

          … especially if it’s a case of a country with automated technologies killing one without or with stochastically meaningless defenses (eg. Defenses that modelling and simulations show won’t be able to prevent such attacks).

          No, in all likelihood the US will tell the country the attack sites, the country either will or will not have the technical level to prevent an amount of damage, will evacuate all necessary personal, and whoever doesn’t get the message or get out in time will be automatically killed.

          Where defenses are partially successful, that information will go into the training data for the next model, or upgrade, and the war machine will roll on.

          • KeenFlame@feddit.nu
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            3 months ago

            You described a scenarios where a human was involved in several stages of the killing so it’s no wonder those don’t hold up

          • KeenFlame@feddit.nu
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            3 months ago

            Sorry I was stressed when replying. Yeah in those cases humans have pulled the trigger. At several stages.

            When arming a murder bot ship and sending to erase an island of life, you then lose control. That person is not pulling loads and loads of triggers. The triggers are automatic by a machine making the decision to end these lives.

            And that is a danger, same as with engineered bio warfare. It just cannot be let out of the box even, or we all may die extremely quick.

        • KeenFlame@feddit.nu
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          3 months ago

          Like if someone made a biological weapon that wipes out a continent

          Will someone go to prison?

          It’s no difference

        • antidote101@lemmy.world
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          Only the losing side is subject to war crimes trials, and no doubt rules of engagement will be developed and followed to prevent people going to jail due to “bad kills”.

          There are really no “bad kills” in the armed services, there’s just limited exposure of public scandals.

          Especially for the US who doesn’t subject its self to international courts like The Hague. So any atrocities, accidents, or war crimes will still just be internal scandals and temporary.

          Same as it is today.

    • xor@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      3 months ago

      I broadly agree, but that’s not what this is, right?

      This is a demonstration of using AI to execute combat against an explicitly selected target.

      So it still needs the human to pull the trigger, just the trigger does some sick plane stunts rather than just firing a bullet in a straight line.

    • Emmie@lemm.ee
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      3 months ago

      I am a firm believer that any war is a crime and there is no ethical way to wage wars lmao It’s some kind of naive idea from extremely out of touch politicans.

      War never changes.

      The idea that we don’t do war crimes and they do is only there to placate our fragile conscience. To assure us that yes we are indeed the good guys. That kills of infants by our soldiers are merely the collateral. A necessary price.

  • WalnutLum@lemmy.ml
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    3 months ago

    AI technically already won this debate because autonomous war drones are somewhat ubiquitous.

    I doubt jets are going to have the usefulness in war that they used to.

    Much more economical to have 1000 cheap drones with bombs overwhelm defenses than put your bets on one “special boi” to try and slip through with constantly defeated stealth capabilities.

  • Lowlee Kun@feddit.de
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    3 months ago

    Can’t wait until the poor people are not killed by other (but less) poor people for some rich bastards anymore but instead the mighty can command their AI’s to do the slaughter. Such an important part of evolution. I guess.

    • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Nobody recruited to fly a $100M airplane is poor. They all come from families with the money and influence to get their kids a seat at the table as Sky Knights.

      A lot of what this is going to change is the professionalism of the Air Force. Fewer John McCains crashing planes and Bush Jrs in the Texas Air National Guard. More technicians and bureaucrats managing the drone factories.

      • Hacksaw@lemmy.ca
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        3 months ago

        I think we both know that there is no way wars are going to turn out this way. If your country’s “proxies” lose, are you just going to accept the winner’s claim to authority? Give up on democracy and just live under WHATEVER laws the winner imposes on you? Then if you resist you think the winner will just not send their drones in to suppress the resistance?

    • A_A@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      it’s the ground that’s upside down because it happened on the other side of the globe 😋.

  • EndOfLine@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    In 2020, so-called “AI agents” defeated human pilots in simulations in all five of their match-ups - but the technology needed to be run for real in the air.

    It did not reveal which aircraft won the dogfight.

    I’m gonna guess the AI won.

    • Harbinger01173430@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Hahaha how the fuck is AI going to win in air-to-air combat if we completely delete them when playing Ace Combat in the highest difficulty?

      Seethe, AI tech bros.

    • Glytch@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      I was actually assuming the opposite, because if the AI won they’d want to brag about it.

      • Cethin@lemmy.zip
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        3 months ago

        No way we give up that information for free. Either way it went, the knowledge of it cost a lot to gain and is useful. If it failed you want your enemy wasting money on it. If it succeeded you want your enemy not investing in it.

      • intensely_human@lemm.ee
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        3 months ago

        Bragging just means more money flowing to enemies’ research programs. When a fight is inevitable you want to appear as weak as possible to prevent your enemy from taking it seriously.

    • Dkarma@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      You think aliens are actually piloting the craft that come all this way?

      You’re never gonna see an alien body because they aren’t here.

      Bet we’ve got a drone or two of theirs tho.

        • psud@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          Dkarma’s comment requires context. They think aliens have visited Earth. They presume people who don’t agree with them expect that if aliens had visited Earth, some would have been shot down and alien bodies would have been recovered

            • psud@lemmy.world
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              3 months ago

              It has nothing to do with the post. I believe the post inspired dkarma to work out that brand new argument that there are no alien bodies (at area 51 probably) because the aliens would use drones

          • intensely_human@lemm.ee
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            3 months ago

            Whether aliens are visiting us matters just about as much as whether tanks are rolling into the village of uncontacted tribes.

            Our tactical disadvantage against alien technology is zero, so they have zero priority as targets.

            Our best bet is to make friends, converse with them. But they are obviously not interested in talking. So our only option is to pray they continue to let us exist. So far they seem to be.

            • intensely_human@lemm.ee
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              3 months ago

              Sorry, technical advantage is zero. Not disadvantage. We have zero capability to counter alien threats.

                • intensely_human@lemm.ee
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                  3 months ago

                  I like immutable records. If the contents of the edit were transparent (are they? in the mod log or something?), I’d have no problem with it. Like if the UI showed the final state but I had the whole log of creates and updates available to inspect like wikipedia, that would be cool