As science fiction technology quickly continues becoming real, the U.S. military now has plans for an experimental plane taken straight out of video games.
The US military is using AI tools during Iran war. But Pentagon’s collaboration with tech companies goes back decades.
The new office wants to speed up the development of new ideas, increases the competition for businesses, and keeps soldiers ...
Automated weapons and decision support systems rely on complementary organizational innovation. From the Electronic Battlefield of Vietnam to the AirLand Battle doctrine of the late Cold War and later ...
The focus on direct commissions expands on a program that saw four Silicon Valley executives join as lieutenant colonels last year.
As the U.S. military expands its use of AI tools to pinpoint targets for airstrikes in Iran, members of Congress are calling for guardrails and greater oversight of the technology’s use in war ...
Much like the war in Ukraine, future battlefields could be drowning in electronic interference, so the US Army stress-tested new command-and-control tech against that threat. The need to maintain ...
The Pentagon’s top spokesman is reiterating that the military wants to use Anthropic’s artificial intelligence technology in ...
The Defense Department has notified senior leadership that they must remove Anthropic's products from their system within 180 days, the latest salvo in a feud between the AI company and the Trump ...
Debates have long swirled around AI and its use in weapons targeting, the idea of no human involvement still an uncomfortable ...
The US military used Anthropic's Claude AI, but after Anthropic refused to remove guardrails against mass surveillance and autonomous weapons, the Pentagon cancelled the contract and turned to OpenAI.
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