marsoc
Microsoft Deploys Generative AI for US Spies
Law enforcement in the United States, United Kingdom, and Australia this week named a Russian national as the person behind LockBitSupp, the pseudonym of the leader of the LockBit ransomware gang that the US says is responsible for extracting 500 million from its victims. Dmitry Yuryevich Khoroshev has been sanctioned and charged with 26 criminal counts in the US, which combined could result in a prison sentence of 185 years. That is, if he's ever arrested and successfully prosecuted--an extremely rare event for suspects who live in Russia. Elsewhere in the world of cybercrime, WIRED's Andy Greenberg interviewed a representative of Cyber Army of Russia, a group of hackers who have targeted water utilities in the US and Europe and are said to have ties to the notorious Russian military hacking unit known as Sandworm. The responses from Cyber Army of Russia were littered with pro-Kremlin talking points--and some curious admissions.
- North America > United States (1.00)
- Asia > Russia (0.98)
- Europe > Russia (0.67)
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Artificial Intelligence and SOF Selection: How MARSOC is looking for its future operators SOFREP
For decades, earning your way onto an elite special operations unit has largely been about your performance on aptitude tests and during physically challenging assessments, but in the very near future, the Marine Corps' special operations unit known as the Raiders, or MARSOC, may be looking to computers to help identify the best candidates. MARSOC is currently experimenting with the idea that machine learning could be used to identify and track factors that lead to success for MARSOC applicants. By first identifying the unique traits that seem to make up the most ideally suited operator, the same practice could be employed on incoming classes -- sifting through Marines that don't possess the best traits for an operator and identifying those that are particularly well suited for the rigors of the special operations community. Over this past summer, SOCOM officials began collecting and assessing a wide range of data points recorded during the selection process for the Marine Corps Forces Special Operations Command. "It's really going to be our first experiment. It's exciting," said David Spirk, SOCOM's chief data officer.
- Government > Regional Government > North America Government > United States Government (0.61)
- Government > Military (0.61)