Posted on 02/21/2005 1:35:10 PM PST by LibWhacker
"Its designers envisioned a 21st-century fighting force of automated tanks, helicopters and planes, remote missile launchers and even troops of robot soldiers - all coordinated by a self-configuring network of satellites, sensors and supercomputers. A way to get the human out of the loop."
This idea didnt work out too well in the Terminator movies... hmmm.
I wasn't aware it's an either/or question.
We're all just stupid humans. Why do we even go on living?
Denote sarcasm.
That's what I tell liberals every day. Someday, I'm hoping the message will stick.
BOOO!!! Skynet's coming to get you.
The New York Times in action once again ...
Let's hope it works. :)
So we can all be STOCKHOLDERS!
:)
Anyways in the story an A.I.computer is developed and then scientists hem and haw over who should be the first to ask it a question and what that question should be.
Finally it is settled that an old woman gets to ask the question. She asks, "Is there a God?"
After a moment the computer answers, "There is now."
> The machine will have been designed by the imperfect
> species called homo sapiens. What if we got something
> wrong?
And the NYT will obsess over the Frankenstein question
until the day their doors close for good, just as
Hollywood has obsessed over this question (since before
Frank' actually, "Modern Times", "Metropolis", etc.).
One of the reasons for NYT bias is that they spend too
much time at the movies, and not enough time in the real
world.
Runaway military computers taking over the world is a pretty common storyline, apparently.
I suspect this is the work of "Queer Eye For The G.I." !!! ;-))
If you take humans out of the loop, you also take casualties out of the equation, and the Times fears, that since America is inherently evil, there would be no mitigating factors to prevent the US from going to war at will and winning consitantly.
Its part of the same reason the Times opposes SDI, they believe something needs to keep America vulnerable and kept in check, casualties and possible destruction and loss of American lives does that.
Its sad, that the Times has been reduced to using movie storylines as proxy in its propaganda war.
Already schematized into PowerPoint presentations with tangled colored arrows, talking points and an Orwellian lexicon - "soldier systems," "networked lethality," "war fighter machine interfaces" - the rationale for the effort is laid out in an Army promotional video: "Either you create your future or you become the victim of the future someone creates for you."
Its amazing how many people mistake PowerPoint presentations and GeeWhiz Video Vignettes for real progress. FCS is certainly a grand vision, but it will be decades before we have the technology to make autonomous robots work in the real world. There were DARPA pilot projects of autonomous vehicles in the mid-80s that came to naught. There was also a recent DARPA challenge in the desert (last year), where the best entry didn't even get ten miles. Also, Boeing is the lead "integrator", so its doomed to failure.
Many people do not challenge the fundamental premise to this article: is AI like that probable or even possible in the near-term future?
Yes, we already have essentially radio controlled heavy machine guns, but they are of little utitlity since they can navigate only certain terrain. They have their purpose in a static defense that a human mind would be wasted on.
I would imagine UAVs will become quite common for reconnaisance and perhaps for a very limited strike capacity, but why bother if you have more powerful missiles that can be sighted?
As for robotic soldiers, they do not seem imminent as drones and seem quite improbable as automatons. Read some of my past threads under my profile and you will see what I mean. Also, the reasons cited by the author: insubordination, retreat--both are very rare in the US Military.
What some people don't seem to get is while AI is a rather small community that makes progress toward greater robots, not AI entities, biotechnology is blooming and encompasses much greater resources. I think biological modifications--temporary or permanent--will become more common place. Some examples are high energy supplements, sleep inhibitors (meaning you don't need sleep), immunity to bio/chem warfare and to some degree nuclear, and strength enhancers. Add the human brain and enhanced braun to some technological additions--like the exoskeleton to help soldiers/Marinese carry heavy equipment on humps--and then you see a more probably future.
But of course, a more realistic version of the tomorrow does not quite fit the nihilism of this liberal author.
Yup, I agree with you and everyone else who has made the point: the article is pretty silly, a lot hysterical, ignorant liberal propaganda.
It's been pointed out a million times -- we already trust our lives to machines all the time, machines that are way more intelligent than the machines of yesteryear. A modern commercial jet's autopilot comes to mind, a machine that must make dozens of decisions per second that could result in death for a whole lot of people.
Machines are going to continue to get smarter and smarter as the years go by, and they're not suddenly going to jump up and decide to turn on us. Why? Because we're not going to build that capability into them, on purpose.
Lol . . . Hollywood . . . They have the minds of children.
Such systems even ideally wouldnt "take causalties out of the equation"...only perhaps AMERICAN casualties. Which might lead to an interesting effect on enemy MORALE eh?
There would be something pathetic [and perhaps demoralizing?] about realizing you are considered so poor a soldier by the enemy you dont even rate getting killed by an HUMAN but instead they will just slaughter you and your brothers-in-arms by sending in a platoon of weapon-bearing 'R2D2s' and no matter what you do you CAN'T kill your foe.
If your an american liberal, this is a bad thing.
They want American casualties to be the price of an military action. Even if its one they believe in (see anything that doesn't help America).
Demoralizing the other sides troops, will only add to them ripping off movie plots or whatever arcane theroies they can provide to be resistant to high tech soldiers.
Keep in mind, recently I was talking to somone who is liberal and he was dancing around about it, but he did at one point say he thought America would be "cheating" in wars, and "rigging it" whenever they fight.
I nicely and politely said, this is not a game, and war is not sport, and lives are not a commodity that always has to be traded for a cause.
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