Robot War in the South China Sea?
As technology advances relentlessly, the real prospect of robot wars is apparently almost upon us. The 2015 book Ghost Fleet, written by Peter Singer and August Cole, lays out a vision of a future war between China and the United States, and the role of artificial intelligence (AI) in that hypothetical military conflict is not small. Drones of various types not only carry out surveillance in this novel but also play crucial roles in communications, logistics, as well as in high-intensity combat. In one memorable vignette, two American unmanned surface vehicles "following an algorithm developed from research done on the way sand tiger sharks cooperated in their hunting" successfully prosecute a Chinese nuclear submarine. Strategists familiar with the U.S. Navy's Sea Hunter program know that this ambition is not especially far-fetched. Yet, what if that book understates China's ambitions to apply AI to the future battlefield, and to undersea warfare, in particular?
Oct-13-2018, 08:45:55 GMT
- Country:
- Asia
- China > Beijing
- Beijing (0.05)
- Philippines (0.05)
- China > Beijing
- North America > United States (1.00)
- Pacific Ocean > North Pacific Ocean
- South China Sea (0.44)
- Asia
- Genre:
- Research Report (0.31)
- Industry:
- Technology:
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence > Robots (0.93)