Putting Artificial Intelligence On The Hunt For Poachers
The problem of how to defend a country changes when your attacker isn't acting rationally. Terrorists put their causes above their home country and don't necessarily fear death or retaliation. So shortly after 9/11, Milind Tambe, a professor of computer science and engineering at USC, proposed a radical new style of protection: Why not use artificial intelligence to make your own targets harder to attack? By matching predictive algorithms with machine learning and some massive processing power, you could create a computer program capable of figuring out how to deploy limited security forces around sensitive places most effectively. The trick would be for those schedules or formations to remain unpredictable.
Jul-2-2016, 07:40:29 GMT
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