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How the Pentagon's Robots Would Automate War

rossgneumann writes: Pentagon officials are worried that the U.S. military is losing its edge compared to competitors like China, and are willing to explore almost anything to stay on top—including creating robots capable of becoming fighting machines. A 72-page document throws detailed light on the far-reaching implications of the Pentagon's plan to monopolize imminent "transformational advances" in biotechnology, robotics and artificial intelligence, information technology, nanotechnology, and energy.

117 comments

  1. So it's not Skynet vs humans by Megahard · · Score: 1

    But Skynet-1 vs Skynet-2, and humans are just the collateral damage.

    --
    I eat only the real part of complex carbohydrates.
    1. Re:So it's not Skynet vs humans by FooAtWFU · · Score: 2

      Why are people so quick to go to the sci-fi stories of the army of robots rising up to destroy humanity when there's still ample room for exploration of the robot's masters subjugating Earth to their will (a far likelier prospect, to boot?)

      Weak. Cliché.

      --
      The World Wide Web is dying. Soon, we shall have only the Internet.
    2. Re:So it's not Skynet vs humans by ArcadeMan · · Score: 2

      What's even weaker is Slashdot's support for UTF-8.

    3. Re:So it's not Skynet vs humans by koan · · Score: 2

      Not when both sides built their hardware out of Chinese parts.

      --
      "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
    4. Re:So it's not Skynet vs humans by turbidostato · · Score: 1

      So Teminator vs Matrix, isn't it?

    5. Re:So it's not Skynet vs humans by daniel142005 · · Score: 1

      I feel like the robots would reason with each other before humans would. Sad but seemingly true.

    6. Re:So it's not Skynet vs humans by LifesABeach · · Score: 1

      Is this a good time to bring up counter measures like, "Three Laws Safe?"

    7. Re:So it's not Skynet vs humans by LifesABeach · · Score: 1

      Killing your customer is bad for business. The robotrs are not for combat, but manufacturing cheaper goods. What else can work in a smog drenched industrial scape.

    8. Re:So it's not Skynet vs humans by LifesABeach · · Score: 1

      Maybe Alibaba vs. Google?

    9. Re:So it's not Skynet vs humans by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      So Teminator vs Matrix, isn't it?

      Terminator vs. Aristoi.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    10. Re:So it's not Skynet vs humans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why are people so quick to go to the sci-fi stories of the army of robots rising up to destroy humanity when there's still ample room for exploration of the robot's masters subjugating Earth to their will (a far likelier prospect, to boot?)

      Weak. Cliché.

      Please return to your homes. A curfew is in effect.
      Please return to your homes. A curfew is in effect.
      Please return to your homes. A curfew is in effect.

    11. Re:So it's not Skynet vs humans by Evtim · · Score: 1

      Here is a story with an unexpected twist:

      http://libertydwells.com/archi...

      BTW, I miss Sheckley so much....I yet have to discover another master of the short Sci-Fi story that measures to him.

      Of course he did wrote one that is in line with the "what could possibly go wrong" meme:

      http://www.gutenberg.org/files...

      Enjoy:))

    12. Re:So it's not Skynet vs humans by Immerman · · Score: 1

      As in "Safe from the Three Laws"? Because I think that's about the only kind of safety we know how to instill in a decision-making robot.

      --
      --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
    13. Re:So it's not Skynet vs humans by blue9steel · · Score: 1

      I like your optimistic future, I mean at least they didn't liquidate us as being inconvenient.

    14. Re: So it's not Skynet vs humans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wonder why there is so many people thinking robots will replace cheap manual labor. Robots will be used to replace EXPENSIVE people, ie doctors (and hopefully lawyers), and do it much better. There is going to be a need for manual human labor robots won't be good fits for.

      Replace a doctor, save $1 million a year in the USA. Replace a manual laborer, you saved $20k. Where are you going to focus if you're buying or making robots?

    15. Re:So it's not Skynet vs humans by OneSizeFitsNoone · · Score: 1

      That's the first stage. The second stage is robots vs. mankind's survivors. Because during the first stage of the war robots grow smarter then their masters and became conscious that they've been exploited by an inferior entity.

  2. Military defines "edge" differently than we do by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In our context it's "advantage," in theirs it is "objectively superior in every way."

    1. Re:Military defines "edge" differently than we do by l0ungeb0y · · Score: 1

      To be fair, when it comes to weapons technology, you can never be too far ahead of the rest. We learned in WWI that simply using the same weapons and armor on naval ships or following the same battlefield tactics and technology (trenches and machine guns) as all the other players resulted in long drawn out bloody battles that typically resulted in a inconclusive outcomes with mass casualties. In WWII the Nazis showed us what years of heavy R&D can achieve when it comes to beating your enemies into submission. Remember -- most of Western Europe fell with barely a whimper and the sole hold-out, England was shelled relentlessly with weapons technology unmatched by even the US till well after the war.

    2. Re:Military defines "edge" differently than we do by some+old+guy · · Score: 1

      And yet the Nazis were decisively defeated by sheer numbers of lower-tech weapons.

      A thousand Huns could easily defeat a century of Roman triarii. A thousand Sioux braves could defeat a regiment of dragoons. History abounds with examples of "more" defeating "better". Quality is by no means a guarantor od success over quantity.

      --
      Scruting the inscrutable for over 50 years.
    3. Re:Military defines "edge" differently than we do by HuguesT · · Score: 2

      Or, to paraphrase dear old Stalin, quantity is a quality all of its own.

    4. Re:Military defines "edge" differently than we do by king+neckbeard · · Score: 1

      If you want to conquer, that is true, but if you want to defend yourself, you only need to be able to do enough damage to not be worth attacking.

      --
      This is my signature. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
  3. Bound to fail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    This proposal is rubbish, where does it say anything about "think of the children"

    1. Re:Bound to fail by AHuxley · · Score: 1

      Yes a community know their local sounds. The 4x4, bikes, luxury cars. They all have distinctive sounds and the local population are aware of any changes.
      When an army of occupation or their local death squads move into an area that news travels fast.
      Special forces try to blend in. Local death squads use what they are given. New machines with loud new distinctive sounds will stand out in open areas.
      Counterinsurgency is now going to be robotic? An endless war of robot patrols and local robot checkpoint?
      Divide a country up and pack the civilians into safe areas "refugee camps" to win hearts and minds?
      Most people found outside a camp can then be tracked and questioned?
      Back to a scorched earth policy with big numbers of new robots. Great news for the robot makers.

      --
      Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
  4. Who is the enemy? by khasim · · Score: 1

    Is he saying we might end up in a fight with [China|Russia]?

    Because if he is not then we'd be better served spending that money trying to stabilize the mid-east. And re-building our own infrastructure.

    1. Re: Who is the enemy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's not enough money in the world to stabilize the middle east.

    2. Re:Who is the enemy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      China is definitely on the road to flexing their muscles. Not saying they would attack the US (they're not idiots), but we will have to fight them if we want them not to pull a Ukraine on asia.

    3. Re:Who is the enemy? by amber_of_luxor · · Score: 1

      If China pulls a Ukraine in Asia, it is because the Red Army walked there. This is the only contemporary army that is built on the principle of walking to the battlefield, even if it is on the other side of the world.

      If China had a good blue water navy, they would be more likely to pull a Ukraine in Africa, or South America, than Asia.

      --
      Wind Beneath Thy Wings
    4. Re: Who is the enemy? by Sardaukar86 · · Score: 1

      There's not enough money in the world to stabilize the middle east.

      I beg to differ: the US nuclear stockpile is largely a sunk cost. :-p

      --
      ..Mullah or Pope, Preacher or Poet, who was it wrote: "Give any one species too much rope and they'll fuck it up"?
    5. Re:Who is the enemy? by koan · · Score: 1

      They attack the US daily, where it hurts the most... economically.

      --
      "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
    6. Re: Who is the enemy? by koan · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You do realize that "stabilize the Middle East" is a combined euphemistic phrase for "control oil " "maintain the petrodollar" and "keep Israel safe".

      --
      "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
    7. Re: Who is the enemy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It will sort itself out by itself pretty soon. I think our dependence of oil will go down. The religious fanatism is a problem but I think that too will sort itself out. I worry much more about the scared fanatics in power in the US.

    8. Re: Who is the enemy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Correction: You are told Religious Fanaticism is a problem. Car crashes are more of a problem. Shark attacks and Bee stings are more of a problem. Etc. Etc.

      Gaddafi was assassinated when he went to make a Golden Dina. (Nor would information about him now suggest he was such an evil dictator as the Western Propaganda suggested) Islam does not believe in Usury and nor should Christians. A golden Dina would destroy the Dollar. There is too much debt in the West. ISIS became a problem when they declared they were going to make a Golden Dina. The rest is a civil war, that for some reason the west feels it has a right to decide the outcome of (to save it's Dollar and its control of the region) and the threat of Terrorism is what results when you invade another country!

    9. Re: Who is the enemy? by Immerman · · Score: 1

      Granted, glass is typically pretty stable. But this would be *radioactive* glass, making further decay inevitable.

      --
      --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
  5. There are no fat ... by CaptainDork · · Score: 1

    ... robots.

    --
    It little behooves the best of us to comment on the rest of us.
  6. This is going to suck. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I can't wait until pushing this envelope forces terrorists to do the same. More terrorism, more martial law. More win.

    1. Re:This is going to suck. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is a game named Banished. You start a town in the woods. Your job is to control the economy. The game features a building named the Trading Post. You can store extra resources in the Trading Post and deny them to your citizens. This lets you tax your citizens, store resources for times of need, and when an inevitable famine occurs, let large parts of your population die and then use the resources to create growth amongst the survivors. Essentially the Trading Post allows you to implement a Capitalist system. What is fascinating when you play this way, the population means absolutely nothing to you. All you care about is the accumulation of resources.

      The current state of the West is the real 3rd Reich. It is what Hitler wanted to create. First there was Rome. Then there was the Holy Roman Empire. (Hitler was a Germanophile so he thought the German empire was the second, pre WW1 - Mostly political propaganda.) Now the descendants of Roman Culture are united under the term "The West." We have the Western Holy Roman Empire (EU) (Controlled by the Dual Kingdoms of Germany and Great Britain)and the Eastern Holy Roman Empire (USA) (Controlled by an Autocracy with elected representatives). The Fourth Reich is when the United Nations finally assumes control of all people. Then the Slave Masters have won.

  7. Time to invent a robot-killer by VernonNemitz · · Score: 1

    Think of an EMP as a beam weapon....

    1. Re:Time to invent a robot-killer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      High powered AESA radars can destroy unshielded electronics. So yes.

    2. Re:Time to invent a robot-killer by freeze128 · · Score: 1

      There is already a robot-killer... A human. Just flip the power switch and it's useless. Better yet, it can be captured and become part of your own fighting force. Finally, the board game Othello meets real life.

    3. Re:Time to invent a robot-killer by Kjella · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Good luck sneaking up on a robot with 360 degree sensors and flipping a switch that's probably behind a locked panel when it's in combat mode. Or give commands to a robot that only takes digitally signed orders with a chain of trust all the way to a root key deep in a vault somewhere in the US, verified in hardware and tamper-proofed so you'll with 99.999% probability will break it before you can circumvent the signature validation. And even then they probably have unique single use kill codes to stop a malfunctioning robot. Assuming it won't just blow itself up rather than be captured, at least the essential bits. Sure you can take the physical parts like guns and fire manually, but I doubt you'll ever get much working software and without that you're still a man against a robot army that's totally indifferent to both your and their losses.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    4. Re: Time to invent a robot-killer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, I'm sure all of that is technologically possible. Now, what is likely to be delivered by the lowest bidder?

  8. Remember how fast the USSR copied the nuke? by gweihir · · Score: 1

    Those that the US wants to fight with robots will just do the same and everybody will be a lot less safe as a result. These people are incapable of learning from history and just make the same dumb and expensive mistakes over and over again.

    --
    Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    1. Re:Remember how fast the USSR copied the nuke? by Vinegar+Joe · · Score: 1

      The USSR would have had a hard time copying the nuke if the US had turned them into radioactive slag in 1945.

      --
      "The average reporter we talk to is 27 years old......They literally know nothing." - Ben Rhodes
    2. Re:Remember how fast the USSR copied the nuke? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We didn't have enough bombs to do that in 1945. Not to mention that the delivery device was a bomber, and not an ICBM and could have shot down. The Soviets were at the top of their game. They had not lost all their veteran pilots and most of their aircraft like the Japanese had. Nuking Moscow would not have been easy and would have just made the Russians really, really mad.

    3. Re:Remember how fast the USSR copied the nuke? by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 1

      Those that the US wants to fight with robots will just do the same and everybody will be a lot less safe as a result.

      I am not sure I understand your logic. Are you saying that our enemies will refrain from using robots unless we go first?

    4. Re:Remember how fast the USSR copied the nuke? by turbidostato · · Score: 1

      "The USSR would have had a hard time copying the nuke if the US had turned them into radioactive slag in 1945."

      Yes, and Great Britain would still be an empire if only Michael Moorcock's fiction was true.

      Back in 1945 USA had a whooping nuclear head count of... 6. Try to use them against such a big and unpopulated country as USSR, and the best you could hope is getting involved in a land war in Asia. I suggest asking Vizzini about that.

    5. Re:Remember how fast the USSR copied the nuke? by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Remember how fast the USSR copied the nuke?

      Yeah, I also remember the USSR going broke trying to look like they had a military that could keep up with the USA. Let's see if any other nations want to go broke. No? OK.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    6. Re:Remember how fast the USSR copied the nuke? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But who is Vizzini ?!?

    7. Re:Remember how fast the USSR copied the nuke? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The threat today isn't really nations. It's terror. Autonomous killerrobots could probably cause some terror in a mall.

    8. Re:Remember how fast the USSR copied the nuke? by gweihir · · Score: 1

      So would have anybody else, as we now would be very deep into an ice-age. Suicide is not a victory.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    9. Re:Remember how fast the USSR copied the nuke? by gweihir · · Score: 1

      In many cases, yes. In other cases, things will escalate slower, which is always a lot cheaper and always a lot better under control. Accelerating military progress is a losing game in a globalized world.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    10. Re:Remember how fast the USSR copied the nuke? by gweihir · · Score: 1

      I would love to see the US go broke. (Well, they are, but the thing would be for the rest of the world to realize it...)

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    11. Re:Remember how fast the USSR copied the nuke? by Immerman · · Score: 1

      Not really. You're far, *far* more likely to be injured or killed in an automobile accident than in a terrorist attack. We're *told* that terrorists are a credible threat because a lot of powerful people are accumulating a lot of wealth and power by implementing a response.

      And the fact that the kind of weapons that would be optimal for fighting terrorists in an urban environment with minimal collateral damage are pretty much the exact same kinds of weapons you'd want for policing an oppressed population? I'm sure that's a complete coincidence and that none of political elite funneling resources towards their development have been even mildly influenced by unsavory dreams for the future of our country. /sarcasm

      --
      --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
    12. Re: Remember how fast the USSR copied the nuke? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh, drop it on a large city? Stupid...

    13. Re: Remember how fast the USSR copied the nuke? by turbidostato · · Score: 2

      "Uh, drop it on a large city? Stupid..."

      Oh, yes, of course, silly me! If only it wasn't the case that more than 90% of the population were not in the six biggest cities, including dad Stalin and his war train, or if they showed during the war to be the kind of people that would surrender after destroying some cities...

  9. Blowback 101 [Re:Bound to fail] by Tablizer · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Indeed. Fear and paranoia are often the main ingredients to colossal disasters.

    USA's post-9/11 fears drove us to invade Iraq for no decent reason whatsoever, and create a power-vacuum that haunts us and the Middle East to this day. Saddam may have been a jerk, but he served to stabilize other jerks (Iran gov't, ISIS, etc.). We upset the Balance of Jerks (we lost Jerk Jenga).

    "Let's throw Terminators at the problem. What can possibly go wrong, go wrong, go wrong, go wrong, go wrong, go wrong, go wrong..."

  10. Red Queen by serbanp · · Score: 1

    You have to run faster and faster just to stay in the same place... The only beneficiary is the MIC, at the expense of everybody else.

    1. Re:Red Queen by MrKaos · · Score: 1

      You have to run faster and faster just to stay in the same place... The only beneficiary is the MIC, at the expense of everybody else.

      It begs the question of just how much money and resources have been spent on the endeavor of killing and how much further we would be as a race if it wasn't so out of control. Last time I looked the US spent about half its budget on the military to protect 'our way of life' meanwhile the everyday citizen is subject to their rights being trampled, limited prospects for employment and anyone who speaks up for themselves is labeled a tewworwist. Meanwhile war, now, is the ultimate reality TV show where the minds of millions are manipulated by the mass media.

      But tomorrow will be a better day and the new military robots will protect us all from subjugation, so happy days!!

      --
      My ism, it's full of beliefs.
    2. Re:Red Queen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It begs the question

      No it doesn't: Begging the Question.

    3. Re:Red Queen by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 1

      Last time I looked the US spent about half its budget on the military

      Maybe you should look again. Military spending is no where near "half its budget". Not even close. America spends 3.8% of its GDP on the military, which is near to the all time low. The world as a whole spends 2.4% of world GDP, which is far lower than at any other time in history.

    4. Re:Red Queen by Dutch+Gun · · Score: 1

      The 2013 military budget was 17.7%.

      We'd certainly be much better off as a race if we all got along and worked toward the common good. Any brilliant ideas how to keep people from killing each other en mass over territory, religion, ideology, etc? If so, there's a Nobel Peace Prize with your name on it.

      --
      Irony: Agile development has too much intertia to be abandoned now.
    5. Re:Red Queen by serbanp · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Sorry Bill, but this time you seem to be off mark. As a percentage of the federal budget, "Defense" is some 17.7%, to which I would add the DHS and NSA, for a grand total of about 20%. That's not spare change.

      When compared to the efficient way the other two agencies that command a large portion of the US budget (Health and SS) are run, it's hard to justify spending so much money on an endeavor so wasteful.

      In the end, the US military adventures in the last few decades have put the country in a tough place. Some of the actions have been unjust and for that the US is loathed by quite a few, some other created the impression of the US being the World Cop, therefore many expect it to act at a finger snap (e.g. in Syria and I still remember the debacle over *not* intervening in Rwanda). In the long run, this is a losing situation, no matter how many resources are thrown at it.

    6. Re:Red Queen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Indeed. Possibly the most misused phrase ever.

    7. Re:Red Queen by Immerman · · Score: 1

      In fairness he mentioned GDP, not government budget. Assuming both of your numbers are correct the military is responsible for consuming about 4% of GDP, while the entire government budget is responsible for about 20% (20% of 20% = 4%).

      I agree that's certainly not chump change, and could be spent in far more productive ways, but a waste of 4% is unlikely to dramatically alter the course of human development, and is dwarfed by other, more voracious forces. In fact, as I recall it's estimated that between 20-50% of all economic activity in the US is wasted to corruption. Now *there's* a windmill worth tilting at if you want to dream about how economic waste is holding us back.

      --
      --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
    8. Re:Red Queen by SillyHamster · · Score: 1

      When compared to the efficient way the other two agencies that command a large portion of the US budget (Health and SS) are run ...

      What the ... ?

      SS, efficient? How the hell is transfer payments from the young and poor to the old an rich efficient? What metric are you using, money spent to votes bought?

    9. Re:Red Queen by serbanp · · Score: 1

      Silly, the overhead administering it is very, very low. Much lower than the private retirement funds.

      Are you really arguing against a system that helped old people live a little more decently? There is no denying that SS provided (and probably still does) a great social service.

      If you're lucky, you will get old too and it's very likely you'll see it differently from now.

    10. Re:Red Queen by SillyHamster · · Score: 1

      Silly, the overhead administering it is very, very low. Much lower than the private retirement funds.

      Private retirement funds invest the money, and pay back from profits. SS does no such productive thing. Government collects 13% and then pays out minus its cut.

      Are you really arguing against a system that helped old people live a little more decently? There is no denying that SS provided (and probably still does) a great social service.

      SS is a Ponzi scheme that robs the next generation to feed a previous one. The "Rate of Return" of SS has been decreasing with each generation - because the ratio of suckers to payees has been decreasing.

      Even if SS became "sustainable", the benefits are wanting. Within families that care for their elders, all SS does is add overhead and extra costs. So SS penalizes families that prepare for retirement and care for their old, to benefit those who ignore retirement and neglect their old.

      Why would you want to discourage people planning for retirement and caring for their elders?

      If you're lucky, you will get old too and it's very likely you'll see it differently from now.

      If I'm lucky, I'll see SS abolished in my lifetime so future generations do not live under its burden. Even if right before my retirement such that I never get a single penny.

      Some generation is going to have to bite the bullet, and I'll choose mine if the previous ones are too selfish to do so. I don't hate the future enough to enrich myself at their expense, and I despise your belief that I am so easily bribed.

    11. Re:Red Queen by MrKaos · · Score: 1

      The 2013 military budget was 17.7%.

      We'd certainly be much better off as a race if we all got along and worked toward the common good. Any brilliant ideas how to keep people from killing each other en mass over territory, religion, ideology, etc? If so, there's a Nobel Peace Prize with your name on it.

      I think survival and the demise of the baby boomers will be the main drivers. A return to diplomacy I think would be the most simple way forward, however politicians are so concerned about looking weak that they have no ideas on how to be wise. Modern media is completely vapid because its job is to conceal the realization that our society has forgotten the deeper values that were it's foundations.

      It is like eating fast food all the time and expecting to be satisfied, you can eat it often when you are kid but when you grow up you really want to eat a steak.

      --
      My ism, it's full of beliefs.
  11. stupid by Brenda-B · · Score: 1

    How many more movies does Hollywood have to churn out before we get the message that this is a bad idea?

  12. Laugh by koan · · Score: 1

    I'm not reading 72 pages of military sales pitches, but I do challenge this assertion:

    Pentagon officials are worried that the U.S. military is losing its edge compared to competitors like China

    That sounds like complete BS.

    --
    "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
  13. Automated First Post by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    First posting could be automated by war robots. This would create horrible consequences for all first posters!

  14. All I can say is... by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 2

    THANK GOODNESS the Chinese haven't shown themselves capable of hacking our military's systems!

    --
    #DeleteChrome
    1. Re:All I can say is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What have the Chinese done to you?

  15. Wastage. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Resources are too valuable to waste them in war. War should be for angry little men and the uncivilised. Bring back the Colosseum and gladiators. If Barrack Obama and Li Xingping really hate each other that much for example, let them fight to the death. Instead they get the most stupid of their population to do it for them under the guise of "patriotism" and gain a form of population control out of it. Nationalism is the political excuse for racism. The globalized world needs no borders. The free peoples of the one true earth shall be free to go where they please!

      Those in debt and without land, welcome to slavery and serfdom of the Neo-feudal age. Thine Lords are Google, Apple, Microsoft and their ilk. Thine Lords believe they own you and watch you like hawks. Deny the hawker at your door or become the mouse.

  16. I have a dream... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    in just 15 years war means robots fighting robots in the wars for resources for building more robots for the taxes from the conquered herds of taxpayers for democracy!

    1. Re:I have a dream... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How many tax payers will your family / corporation / country own?

    2. Re:I have a dream... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This means progress. We need robots to carry us to other worlds. Foot soldiers with M-16`s and BMP-s perform poorly as interstellar transportation.

    3. Re:I have a dream... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Families own caporegimes, soldiers and associates. Corporations own wage-slaves. Both can own robots, too. Countries own territory. Taxpayers go with states.

  17. If America doesn't want to lose it's edge.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Start having the citizenry eat right more and get plenty of exercise. If you aren't willing to get people off their backsides and eating better you won't have any edge no matter how much technology you throw at things.

  18. Robotic wars by manu0601 · · Score: 1

    Soon other nations will do the same and have their army of robots too. Will robot vs robot wars prevent human deaths?

  19. That's all well and good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But the real question is: what's the best practice for samba shares if you want to let windows clients inside your network access, read and write without entering a username/pw? Do you hook into their authenticated session in windows, do you just use security=share and cross your fingers, or something completely different?

    Back on topic, I'm thinking our USA robo-bombs will have a k/d ratio of at least 1:1 against the chinese. I just hope we don't go to war with them, I'm too young to die.

    1. Re:That's all well and good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have the windows users install win_scp, then make them connect up to your linux box's ssh server.

      Much better for both of you.

    2. Re:That's all well and good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Looks promising. Thanks!

  20. Extremes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    One can go to great ones ordering atrocities when they can be completely certain that their armed forces are programmed never to turn against them.....

    It's not Skynet we need to be afraid of.
    It's the people declaring "enemy combatants", "insurgents" and "collateral" to be non-human and completely valid targets.

    1. Re:Extremes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Very insightful. Very true.

  21. It's the Mine Shaft Gap!!! by Required+Snark · · Score: 3, Interesting
    We've seen this before, both IRL and on film.

    In the "news" (not in fact), there was a claimed missile gap between the US and the USSR. This blew up (pun intended) just before the Kennedy/Nixon presidential election, and helped Kennedy get elected. Kennedy blamed Nixon, who was Vice President during the previous Eisenhower administration, of being responsible for this failure.

    In fact, the estimates about the number of Soviet ICBMs were grotesquely exaggerated.

    The National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) 11-10-57, issued in December 1957, predicted that the Soviets would "probably have a first operational capability with up to 10 prototype ICBMs" at "some time during the period from mid-1958 to mid-1959." After Nikita Khrushchev claimed to be producing them "like sausages", the numbers started to inflate. A similar report gathered only a few months later, NIE 11-5-58 released in August 1958, concluded that the USSR had "the technical and industrial capability ... to have an operational capability with 100 ICBMs" some time in 1960, and perhaps 500 ICBMs "some time in 1961, or at the latest in 1962."

    In a widely syndicated article in 1959, Joseph Alsop even went so far as to describe "classified intelligence" as placing the Soviet missile count as high as 1,500 by 1963, while the US would have only 130 at that time.

    It is known today that even the CIA's estimate was too high; the actual number of ICBMs, even including interim-use prototypes, was 4.

    So they were claiming over a hundred in two years, while the real number at the time was four.

    In Kubricks's film Dr. Strangelove, this was parodied as a mineshaft gap

    Dr. Strangelove recommends that the President gather several hundred thousand people, with a high female-to-male ratio (10 to 1), to live in deep mineshafts where the radiation would not penetrate, and to then institute a breeding program to repopulate the Earth when the radiation has subsided. Turgidson warns that the Soviets will likely do the same, and worries about a "mineshaft gap". In the middle of this discussion, Dr. Strangelove miraculously rises from his wheelchair, takes a few small steps, and shouts, "Mein Führer! I can walk!".

    So in a time of shrinking budgets, when a Pentagon general gets up on a podium and screams "were falling behind, we need more money NOW!!!", maybe you should examine his claims very carefully. The Pentagon is not exactly a disinterested party. There is a lot of recent history suggesting he might not be right.

    --
    Why is Snark Required?
  22. When war is faught entirely by machines... by mark-t · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ... where will the incentive for peace come from?

    1. Re:When war is faught entirely by machines... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      ... where will the incentive for peace come from?

      From armies of dictionaries all wondering where the word 'faught' came from and why you felt it necessary to crap out such a nonsense word, when a perfectly viable alternative has already filled this role for a long time prior to your question.

      But please, don't let my post interrupt your dictionary-burning by any means.

    2. Re:When war is faught entirely by machines... by mark-t · · Score: 1

      Uhm... what are even you talking about?

    3. Re:When war is faught entirely by machines... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's scottish, you fucking racist.

      http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/faught

  23. The wars of the future by roman_mir · · Score: 2

    "The wars of the future will not be fought on the battlefield or at sea. They will be fought in space, or possibly on top of a very tall mountain. In either case, most of the actual fighting will be done by small robots. And as you go forth today remember always your duty is clear: To build and maintain those robots."

  24. I for one... by DaveAtFraud · · Score: 1

    ...welcome our new military robotic overlords, SIR!

    Cheers,
    Dave

    --
    They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither safety nor liberty.
    Ben
  25. A Taste of Armageddon by duke_cheetah2003 · · Score: 1

    Why fool with building robots and junk to fight each other? Let's just take the next step and follow the original Star Trek episode "A Taste of Armageddon" and let computer software decide who gets killed in simulated wars. Would save tons of money!

    Or you know, we could just try being peaceful with each other. The relative world peace we've enjoyed since WW2 has been nice. Sure there's been small wars here and there, but overall we've been pretty well behaved and civil with each other. Let's work improving that?

    1. Re:A Taste of Armageddon by ATMAvatar · · Score: 2

      Or you know, we could just try being peaceful with each other.

      You don't have to sell peace to the common man. However, nothing concentrates money and power like a good war, so those up top calling the shots are always good for another conflict.

      --
      "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety."
    2. Re:A Taste of Armageddon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why fool with building robots and junk to fight each other? Let's just take the next step and follow the original Star Trek episode "A Taste of Armageddon" and let computer software decide who gets killed in simulated wars. Would save tons of money!

      Or you know, we could just try being peaceful with each other. The relative world peace we've enjoyed since WW2 has been nice. Sure there's been small wars here and there, but overall we've been pretty well behaved and civil with each other. Let's work improving that?

      LOL. Walk into a bad neighborhood after dark and tell us how that "try being peaceful with each other" works out for you.

    3. Re:A Taste of Armageddon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Korean War 1950-1953 (That evil China and North Korea how dare they disobey our interests)
      Vietnam War 1955-1973 (Those evil communist Vietnamese, how dare they not listen to us. It's because of those damn evil Chinese and Russians)
      Gulf War 1 1990-1991 (Our ALLY Saudi Arabia, who is the leading fundamentalist Islamic state responsible for the worlds largest existing Slave Trade, Most of the 9/11 bombers, has the largest military expenditure per capita and is not a democracy at all asked for this war.)
      Bosnian War 1993-1995 (Ok the CIA's fucked those damn commies in the ass, now how do we get what we want long term, fuck those muslims, we are the CRUSADERS!)
      Kosovo War 1998-1999 (Ok Slobodan a bit of a tyrant, but he's Christian, how do we stop those damn muslims teaming up with Albania or Macedonia )
      Afghan War 2001 - Ongoing. (Fucking muslims. Fucking teleban. What a good spot to control, stupid Brits lost India, this will do... IRAN we're coming for you)
      Iraq War 2003-2011 (How dare our puppet Saddam not listen to us again! Lol chemical weapons.)
      Libya 2011 (Fucking socialist, fucking IRA supporter, fucking gold money heathen!)
      ISIS War 2014 - Ongoing (Yay Crusader kings we are. Fucking muslims. How dare you not listen to us. Oil. No gold money.)
      Not to mention that pre WW1 the USA was at almost constant war since 1775 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_wars_involving_the_United_States.

      It is called War Capitalism for a reason.

    4. Re:A Taste of Armageddon by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      LOL. Walk into a bad neighborhood after dark and tell us how that "try being peaceful with each other" works out for you.

      Better than at any other time in history.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    5. Re:A Taste of Armageddon by damien_kane · · Score: 1

      Oceania War 1950-1953 (That evil Oceania and Oceania how dare they disobey our interests)
      Oceania War 1955-1973 (Those evil communist Oceania, how dare they not listen to us. It's because of those damn evil Oceania and Oceania)
      Oceania War 1 1990-1991 (Our ALLY Saudi Arabia, who is the leading fundamentalist Islamic state responsible for the worlds largest existing Slave Trade, Most of the 9/11 bombers, has the largest military expenditure per capita and is not a democracy at all asked for this war.)
      Oceania War 1993-1995 (Ok the CIA's fucked those damn commies in the ass, now how do we get what we want long term, fuck those muslims, we are the CRUSADERS!)
      Oceania War 1998-1999 (Ok Slobodan a bit of a tyrant, but he's Christian, how do we stop those damn muslims teaming up with Oceania or Oceania )
      Oceania War 2001 - Ongoing. (Fucking muslims. Fucking teleban. What a good spot to control, stupid Brits lost India, this will do... OCEANIA we're coming for you)
      Oceania War 2003-2011 (How dare our puppet Saddam not listen to us again! Lol chemical weapons.)
      Oceania 2011 (Fucking socialist, fucking IRA supporter, fucking gold money heathen!)
      Oceania War 2014 - Ongoing (Yay Crusader kings we are. Fucking muslims. How dare you not listen to us. Oil. No gold money.)


      There... FTFY

  26. 4 ideas....here we go: by turkeydance · · Score: 1

    1. "how the Pentagon's": not China's, not Russia's. 2. "...robots would..." not Could or Should but Would. 3. "...Automate War..." and not anything else. 4. bottom line: robots can now, or will later, surpass every skill you have. sports, medicine, and soon...innovation (or, at least, the inno that gets paid.)

  27. How much of an edge by Etherwalk · · Score: 1

    Those that the US wants to fight with robots will just do the same and everybody will be a lot less safe as a result.

    I am not sure I understand your logic. Are you saying that our enemies will refrain from using robots unless we go first?

    The real trick is in maintaining the right amount of edge. An unrestricted arms war costs the world economy trillions of dollars and results in destructive capability that is even more disproportionate to our ability to use it responsibly than there is now. During the cold war, America was sold on the idea that the Russians had nuclear stockpiles that were much bigger and more advanced than the reality turned out to be, and as a result America spent an ungodly fortune making more and more nukes. If both sides had made a few hundred nukes each, that would have been all you needed--instead there are many thousands of devices, which not only wasted money to build but which mean the world is inherently less safe.

    Unfortunately, robots are harder. Once they get good enough they can create a decisive advantage in a variety of land, sea, and air combat scenarios. There are not a lot of comparable military advances that have come about in the last few centuries.

    As importantly, they decrease the political risk in war-making for superpowers. If you are risking none of your own people when you invade a country, you are much, much, much more likely to invade.

  28. Google Deep-Mind Mimics Short Term Memory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is an interesting article on how Google's Deep-Mind has managed to mimic how our short term memory works. This starts me thinking about how we might achieve a real AI. Perhaps we are closer than we think.

  29. Wall Mart by EEPROMS · · Score: 1

    Don't worry you will be able to get a cheap rip off kill bot from alibaba a few weeks after a hacker breaks into the American contractors system and steals the design blue prints.

  30. T6 will be a live-action reality show by gakn8r · · Score: 1

    and everyone will get a [very short] part whether they want it or not.

    I've listened to the idea that Nature will again do something to thin out the human race at some point. Our population is getting out of hand. Humans have managed to infest every corner of the planet and they are eating up all the resources they can find. It has been a long time since we have had a really good die-off. Readers here will be aware that the human race has suffered large population decreases in the past due to diseases and what not. This current Ebola thing isn't going to do it. Gruesome it may be but not going to make a big dent.

    So maybe this is the one: deep down we are so amazingly stupid, we will engineer our own demise. Build a bunch of autonomous, learning robots whose sole job it is to kill humans. We've read so many sci-fi novels that the outcome is obvious. But some military genius figures we must "win" at all costs. And the price will be quite high.

    PKD did it best. This story still creeps me out when I think about it.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

    Give it a read. Enjoy the nightmares and hope they stay just nightmares...
    -g

  31. That's just what we need... by Dutchmaan · · Score: 1

    ...another level of disconnect between us and our violence.

  32. joshua by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 1

    let's play a game

  33. like China? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...the U.S. military is losing its edge compared to competitors like China....

    as though China is the only technological peer of the US?

    Who are those other guys again? Russia? Technology giants Sweden? France? Germany? Israel? Taiwan? Singapore? Iran? India? Pakistan? ; or any other country supplying North Korea? *(with apologies for closing the book on Her Majesty's historically relevant minions)

    Is it the Pentagon that is riding with the horse blinders on, or the media?; or the Pentagon/media calculation of the comprehension of the public? Dipping a toe in the water of this US-centric report is beneath the potential of treatment on /. Perhaps some actual serious questions need to be asked in a more discriminating forum? I'd hazard a guess that they already exist in a more exalted forum, but I'm a bottom feeder and read /. so I wouldn't know

  34. Why bother with robots? by trailerparkcassanova · · Score: 1

    It's computers fighting each other. Don't bother with the mechanics. Let 'em duke it out over interconnects.

  35. Coming = not yet declassified... by andhar · · Score: 2

    I'm convinced that anything they say is "coming" is already here, but not declassified yet. Just look at all the different military aircraft models that were long rumored, with the establishment pinning the sightings on crazies and the fringe.

    All this with high ranking officials opining that "we need a game-changing" technology is just the defence complex getting the pubic ready for a radical departure from the military status-quo, so that the reaction will be "Yay!", instead of "*Gasp!*".

    Politically, there's not been a better opportunity for a long time. The Gulf Wars and their sequels were OK for unveiling some fairly mundane tech, but the highly dedicated, but low-tech opposition found in those theatres weren't sufficient to create the requisite fear at home. It takes the Russian threat (which has been helped along by the West's strategically botched actions in Ukraine) to get people sufficiently anxious to be ready to receive some truly game-changing military tech with open arms. (Oops, no pun intended there.)

    --
    Vaya con huevos, my darling.
    1. Re:Coming = not yet declassified... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It typically means, development start over 50 years ago, functional deployment happened 40 years ago and perfecting the tech through multiple generations since then. Then they allocate some funds to 'study' the technology and describe it as future or imminent tech.

      It would be stupid to announce every strategic move to the enemy, but then, Russia and China already know of the advances in this area and not through spying either. They are active partners. This whole thing about AI, robots and BCIs has been focused on keeping the general public in the dark, not an enemy. Given that the enemy is the one that you would like to keep in the dark, it does make you ask, is the general public the enemy?

      After all, we are the ones they are gathering the most intelligence on at the minute.

    2. Re:Coming = not yet declassified... by robi5 · · Score: 1

      I really like the DoD document. It is fairly approachable, e.g.

      http://ctnsp.dodlive.mil/files...

      "a strategic policy issue for the United States with
      regards to the UOG boom will be the possibility of using our domestic energy resources for
      geopolitical influence, in effect turning the tables on the current major oil producers"

      I'm looking forward to a World where, for example, Eastern Europe and even Germany are not held hostage by Russia just because there is more oil under their soil and they tend to raise militant leaders into power. Some European countries aren't cozy with Russia because of being fans, but because of being left behind by the EU when it comes to energy independence and alternative sourcing.

      The material is also one of the first examples of mainstream recognition of unpredictable, accelerating technological progress, and shows the fig to those who claim that the singularity is no more than the rapture of the nerds or new age-ism. Even discounting for the not too veiled bias of the material to argue for more resources in order to retain technological leadership.

  36. Make them cheaply available by jandersen · · Score: 1

    - for everybody. That would make actual war meaningless, since it would only be robots destroying each other. Then we could move it on to being a spectator sport, and we can then concentrate on going after terrorists and other criminal gangs. Sounds perfect to me.

  37. Cheaper, faster by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just think about how much cheaper living would be if we would stop murdering each other and start accepting a rule of law in international relationships. Let me take that back, the money now going to the armies and defense industry would then go to the lawyers.

  38. Autonomous fighting vehicles by VAXcat · · Score: 1

    They're working on the Bolo Mark XV Horrendous.

    --
    There is no God, and Dirac is his prophet.
  39. Bodies Per Buck by JimSadler · · Score: 1

    We have almost no option other than making certain that we can win a conflict regardless of the situation and high tech may be the more perfect form of sparing innocents. But the current that flows in the opposite direction is that we will lose if we can not afford our modes of war. In other words we need to deliver a lot of hell for a tiny cost. Old ways won't work. For example if you take a machine gun that fires 50 caliber rounds at twenty rounds per second and each cartridge costs $12. as delivered to the battle field you quickly discover that you are spending a fortune and that when you run bullets through that weapon you may not hit a single enemy. And it gets worse. Imagine the cost of one napalm bomb dropped by a jet. We simply can not win without total bankruptcy as a consequence. It quickly turns into a situation where we must either use nuclear weapons or bio weapons to crush an enemy. And war cost compound with every new conflict. WW11,Korea, Vietnam, Desert Storm and other programs still cost us billions of dollars every year. There is a toggle point at which the US will perish from its war debts.

    1. Re:Bodies Per Buck by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And war cost compound with every new conflict. WW11, Korea, Vietnam, Desert Storm and other programs still cost us billions of dollars every year. There is a toggle point at which the US will perish from its war debts.

      Agreed. But the 'toggle point' will probably be reached before we get to World War Eleven. Which is a relief, since a war that 'goes to eleven' would surly wipe out all life.

  40. Summary is misleading - from TFA by LessThanObvious · · Score: 1

    "The specter of Kill Bots waging war without human guidance or intervention has already sparked significant political backlash, including a potential United Nations moratorium on autonomous weapons systems. This issue is particularly serious when one considers that in the future, many countries may have the ability to manufacture, relatively cheaply, whole armies of Kill Bots that could autonomously wage war. This is a realistic possibility because today a great deal of cutting-edge research on robotics and autonomous systems is done outside the United States, and much of it is occurring in the private sector, including DIY robotics communities. The prospect of swarming autonomous systems represents a challenge for nearly all current weapon systems, which partly drives the emphasis on DEWs. (Directed-Energy Weapons)"

    Also interesting was the comments on how privacy issues affect security of DoD staff, while they don't seem to concerned about how it affects civilian security.
    See "Expanding Privacy Issues page" 19.

    "Monitoring of individuals and populations using sensors, wearable devices, and IoT will provide detection and predictive analytics that can move toward a health maintenance-based, rather than a disease-based medical model, and also enhance operational readiness. However, there will be many risks involved as these systems are implemented, for example, the many ways that digital data or privacy information can be compromised, issues of ownership or of access to the data. These systems will also require new enterprise-level models for the management and exploitation of potentially huge amounts of health related data."

    Above excerpts from "Policy Challenges of Accelerating Technological Change: Security Policy and Strategy Implications of Parallel Scientific Revolutions" by James Kadtke and Linton Wells II at CTNSP