U.S. Department of Defense “AI shouldn’t be a weapon, but a risk identification device… We must clearly determine where it’ll be used.”

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The U.S. Department of Defense recently announced that its goal in cooperation with artificial intelligence (AI) developers similar to OpenAI is to extend the efficiency of the Department of Defense without AI killing people. The road is drawn that AI will likely be used as a defense device to discover danger, not as a lethal weapon.

Radha Plum, Chief Digital and AI Officer on the Department of Defense, said in an interview with TechCrunch on the nineteenth (local time), “Although AI shouldn’t be currently getting used as a weapon, it’s providing significant benefits to the Department of Defense in identifying, tracking and assessing threats.” said.

“We’re expanding the ways during which we will speed up the execution of the kill chain in order that commanders can respond in a timely manner to guard the force,” he said. “Generative AI plays a critical role within the planning and strategic design of the kill chain.” added. The ‘kill chain’ is a military process that identifies, tracks, and eliminates threats and includes complex systems similar to sensors, platforms, and weapon systems.

Cooperation between the Department of Defense and AI developers is comparatively recent. In October last 12 months, the Biden administration signed a ‘National Security Memorandum’ calling for presidency agencies to actively introduce AI in military and intelligence collection.

Afterwards, in November, Mehta collaborated with Lockheed Martin and Booz Allen to offer ‘Rama’ to defense organizations. That very same month, Antropic partnered with Palantir, and in December, OpenAI signed the same cope with Anduril. Cohere can be distributing its model with Palantir.

To this end, Meta, OpenAI, and Antropic have modified their policies to permit AI for use for military purposes.

Seemingly conscious of this, Dr. Plum said, “We’ve got been very clear about what we are going to use their technology for and what we won’t use it for.”

He also said, “AI helps analyze various scenarios and allows commanders to creatively consider response options.”

This remark appears to have been made in response to growing internal criticism over the recent provision of AI technology for military purposes by Open AI and others. Last 12 months, some Amazon and Google employees were fired and arrested for obstruction of business after protesting military contracts with Israel.

Reporter Park Chan cpark@aitimes.com

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