Search results for: artificial intelligence
If you know the enemy and know yourself, you need not fear the outcome of one hundred battles — Sun Tzu ROCKVILLE, MD: In a bland office building 30 minutes from the Pentagon, a wall-mounted screen shows, in real time, every suspicious email and LinkedIn request sent to employees of Lockheed Martin, the world’s largest…
By Sydney J. Freedberg Jr.Will this result in more operations like the Kessel Run Experimentation Lab in Boston, where coders join airmen to build useful software? Perhaps it will mean the service will hire civilian coders or train airmen to write code.
By Colin ClarkScience fiction taught us to fear smart machines we can’t control. But reality should teach us to fear smart machines that need us to take control when we’re not ready. From Patriot missiles to Tesla cars to Airbus jets, automated systems have killed human beings, not out of malice, but because the humans operating them…
By Sydney J. Freedberg Jr.Steel Dome is a network-centric air defense system equipped with artificial intelligence features and is expected to protect Turkey’s entire airspace against all ranges of threats, the government said.
By Agnes HelouArtificial intelligence and Generative AI has the potential to be arguably the DoD’s most important tool for collaboration from the tactical edge to the back office, while at the same time generating more red flags than arguably any other technology.
In this webinar, we examine how DoD organizations can best utilize and adapt to the capabilities of Generative AI to address threats from Great Powers in areas like cybersecurity and missile proliferation while transforming enterprise functions, collaboration.
By nickschollCybersecurity is the one commonality among cloud computing, secure data and networking, artificial intelligence, cross-domain solutions, modernization, and the Defense Department’s ability to most effectively execute on JADC2 and all-domain operations.
In this webinar, we examine how DoD organizations are moving from traditional network security methods to achieve reduced network attack surfaces, automation and risk management, and secure data-sharing necessary to deter threats.
By nickscholl“I love AI. I want lots of AI,” Dave McKeown told Breaking Defense. But, so far, neither government nor industry has developed artificial intelligence that can really help with cybersecurity.
By Sydney J. Freedberg Jr.“The French Ministry of Armed Forces will benefit from technological breakthroughs and innovations in the fields of robotics, drones and artificial intelligence, in order to evaluate a new naval capability,” said French manufacturer Naval Group.
By Tim MartinOn the DoD’s list of modernizations, few are higher than understanding how artificial intelligence can be best applied, operationalized, and trusted.
By Breaking DefenseThe service is also currently developing a risk management framework for Project Linchpin, the Army’s first program of record to help build out a trusted artificial intelligence/machine learning pipeline, according to Jen Swanson, deputy assistant secretary of the Army for data, engineering and software.
By Jaspreet GillOver the last 11 months, the US has made major progress in defining “Responsible Military Use of Artificial Intelligence” and even getting other nations to sign on the idea — without ever actually precluding the kind of automated “killer robots” activists want to ban.
By Sydney J. Freedberg Jr.NGA Director Vice Adm. Frank Whitworth also gave an update on Project Maven and how NGA is working to incorporate artificial intelligence, responsibly, to sift through mountains of data.
By Jaspreet GillThe Space Force, in essence, wants to move the 2018-conceived Unified Data Library from a card catalog system to a machine-to-machine search engine using artificial intelligence tools.
By Theresa Hitchens