atzanteol@sh.itjust.works
on 11 Jun 11:13
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Militaries are famously secretive.
Pickleideas@lemmy.world
on 11 Jun 07:22
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I’m glad they, allegedly, stopped after the one test. This sounds an awful lot like a war crime on Ukraine’s part. Enemy combatants (especially since we know most of Russia’s army are being trafficked) need the opportunity to surrender peacefully.
MalReynolds@slrpnk.net
on 11 Jun 07:34
nextcollapse
Pretty sure it’s not a war crime yet. Damn sure it should be. Human in the loop. Update Geneva conventions.
In this role, it should already be covered under the Anti-Personnel Mine Ban Convention IMO.
Drones that kill anyone entering an area are just more sophisticated land mines.
Perhaps (and the uncertainty is part of the problem), but a more general scope is needed. If it’s AI arguments will be made that no-one is responsible. Someone should be responsible for people getting killed, and justify themselves if needed, and face consequences if they cannot.
As if having a human in the loop would make slaughtering people more humanitarian. How many reports have we read of soldiers from any power perpetrating horrendous acts on enemy combatants, or worse, civilians?
I agree that murder without prejudice should be curtailed if at all possible and that autonomous robots are not likely to accept surrender, but it’s not like human agressors are always open to it either.
MalReynolds@slrpnk.net
on 11 Jun 08:03
nextcollapse
Not saying it’s good, or humanitarian. War crimes don’t stop war (much as I would prefer it all to be called murder rather than state sanctioned violence). The Geneva accords create a bottom level of godawful that is unacceptable that the various militaries agree on. Hopefully it helps protects civilians and soldiers both. AI weapons are a plausible existential threat, they should be treated as such, also, importantly, they are also a vector for plausible deniability.
‘Humans in the loop’ could also provide a level of friction that might make atrocities less common as the commanders cover their asses by putting responsibility on those lower down in the hierarchy, who might choose not to. The only reason nuclear war didn’t happen in the 60s was one person saying NO
Of course, the US is (likely) currently bombing civilian water supplies, so we need to drag ourselves back up to basic humanity (and yes, humanity is anything but basic as history attends).
the US is (likely) currently bombing civilian water supplies,
This needs to be addressed criminally later.
MalReynolds@slrpnk.net
on 11 Jun 13:35
nextcollapse
One can hope.
Nonconfrontational@lemmy.ml
on 11 Jun 16:52
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Hague invasion act
Hueristic_Autistic@lemmy.world
on 11 Jun 10:14
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I think that’s really what it all comes down to, is the lack of surrender by a system that could eventually be able to make choices on the fly. You’re right though, in the end it’s not more humanitarian by any means. I suppose it removes a little bit of the sting and I guess If you’re able to pull off the mental gymnastics of being able to convince yourself that a computer program taking out a bunch of people in one go is less of a burden to carry on the conscious but I bet it’s a lot to carry for those that have to program and command the actions to happen and for the ones that actually have to engage with those systems.
rain_enjoyer@sopuli.xyz
on 11 Jun 08:04
nextcollapse
maybe simply this didn’t work well enough for it to be worth the effort. there were already surrenders to drones (rare) there’s no reason why automated drone couldn’t do it as well
Hueristic_Autistic@lemmy.world
on 11 Jun 10:05
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No, there’s been advances in the program since its inception. They’re still in use.
ExtremeDullard@piefed.social
on 11 Jun 07:24
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Military training exists to brainwash decent human beings with a sense of morality and critical thinking abilities, who know they mustn’t kill and would refuse requests to kill, into killing machines who are proud to follow orders (and then experience PTSD when they’re returned to civilian life and realize what they’ve done).
Therefore, I contend that fully autonomous drones have killed human beings since wars have been a thing, and those drones are called “soldiers”.
A much better predictor for PTSD is crimes against humanity committed. Killing in war, when necessary is almost “free”.
ExtremeDullard@piefed.social
on 11 Jun 12:45
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Killing in war, when necessary is almost “free”.
It’s thinking like that that’s the reason war still exists. Everybody thinks killing is awful, apart in certain circumstances when it’s okay, when it’s in fact never okay.
I was specifically talking about PTSD.
War exists for real world reasons. Most of which aren’t a desire for human suffering. A worldview of good and evil just doesn’t do reality justice and discards the human suffering caused by your and anyone’s actions.
Hueristic_Autistic@lemmy.world
on 11 Jun 09:01
nextcollapse
Nope these make the choices. Ai driven 99.999%
When deployed, the drone is launched into a designated hunt-zone. It navigates purely via visual landmarks. The onboard AI constantly screens the video feed. When an object matches its classification matrix (e.g., a specific mobile missile launcher), the system locks onto the pixel coordinate, arms the ESAD, and executes a terminal dive completely independent of human input.
This tightly integrated anatomy of Edge Compute + Computer Vision + Modular Lethality is what defines the reality of autonomous robotic warfare today.
When deployed, the soldier is launched into a designated hunt-zone. He navigates purely via visual landmarks. His brain constantly screens the nerve data from his eyes. When an object matches its classification matrix (e.g., a specific mobile missile launcher), the organism locks onto the pixel coordinate, arms the ESAD, and executes a terminal dive completely dependent on human input.
Hueristic_Autistic@lemmy.world
on 11 Jun 09:37
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I don’t understand are you agreeing with me or quoting me because that’s not from the article, that’s from my Ai prompt that I run through gemini and then ask questions.
kbobabob@lemmy.dbzer0.com
on 11 Jun 10:43
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You didn’t understand that they took your comment and applied it to a human instead of a computerized drone?
kbobabob@lemmy.dbzer0.com
on 11 Jun 10:43
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You didn’t understand that they took your comment and applied it to a human instead of a computerized drone?
Daxter101@lemmy.blahaj.zone
on 11 Jun 10:19
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Fun and interesting take, as far as commentary on soldiers.
These new fully autonomous drones though, are able to be mass produced by Capital. That’s the important difference. It means that there is a nascent way, to bypass the need to have a country with high births to fuel a war machine, and you can just more easily Capital your way to domination.
And that’s kinda scary.
atomicbocks@sh.itjust.works
on 11 Jun 13:27
nextcollapse
Luckily we don’t live in a world yet where capital can make those drones without labor. Until we do they will still need the populace as a whole.
No, the psychological training to get people to kill each other without thinking is new. Before the 1960’s it was common for soldiers to purposely miss. The desensitising and psychological training of shooting at human targets without thinking changed modern warfare and turned people into killing machines.
This is why I stopped playing ARC. Felt like it was just conditioning to prefer shooting-on-sight than being friendly. That or being a sociopath and lying and shooting someone in the back.
Neither of which are properties I like to even play pretend having.
You’re very correct in your comment, btw. Nowadays US uses methods that condition people so well that the shoot-to-kill amount of soldiers is like ~95%. In WWII (and everything preceding it) it was roughly 2% of men who were quite literally psychopaths (not in the criminal sense, but a sense of being able to turn off their empathy, many surgeons and ceos belong to this group of ppl). Only <25% of soldiers in a position to fire at the enemy actually shot at them. About 1% of US fighter pilots accounted for ~50% their kills.
Lindybeige has what I think is a fairly good video on the subject.
I suppose that’s the point of it - no comms at all so can’t be jammed.
Hueristic_Autistic@lemmy.world
on 11 Jun 08:56
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In the current landscape of military technology, what the public conceptually calls “terminator drones” refers to Lethal Autonomous Weapon Systems (LAWS), One-Way Attack (OWA) uncrewed aerial systems, and Collaborative Combat Aircraft (CCA).
Because modern electronic warfare (EW) can instantly sever radio control and jam GPS, these systems cannot rely on a human pilot or cloud computing. They are designed as self-contained, edge-computing robotic hunters.
The physical and technological anatomy of a modern autonomous combat drone is categorized into five core systems:
1. The Neural Architecture (Edge AI Compute Core)
The “brain” is no longer a simple autopilot board; it is an onboard AI accelerator optimized for computer vision and localized decision-making.
The System-on-Chip (SoC): Military-grade edge AI processors (such as ruggedized variants of the Nvidia Jetson Orin series or custom ASICs) capable of executing hundreds of Trillions of Operations Per Second (TOPS).
The Local Model Stack: Instead of connecting to an external server, the drone carries local, highly compressed convolutional neural networks (CNNs). These models are trained on massive synthetic datasets to immediately recognize, classify, and track military hardware (tanks, radar dishes, infantry) even when camouflaged or partially obscured.
2. The Sensor Suite (The Perception Layer)
To operate in “denied environments” where GPS is jammed, the drone relies on a fused sensory array to build an internal map of the world.
Electro-Optical/Infrared (EO/IR) Gimbals: High-resolution thermal and visual cameras that feed raw video directly into the AI computer vision core.
Optical Flow & Visual Inertial Odometry (VIO): Downward-facing cameras that track the movement of the ground pixel-by-pixel. Combined with an Inertial Measurement Unit (IMU), VIO allows the drone to navigate with pinpoint accuracy by “looking” at the terrain, rendering GPS entirely unnecessary.
Solid-State LiDAR / Micro-Radar: Used for low-altitude obstacle avoidance and capturing the 3D geometry of a target during the terminal attack phase.
3. The EW-Resistant Communications & Swarm Mesh
When drones operate collectively, they utilize decentralized mesh networking.
Software-Defined Radios (SDR): Radios that dynamically hop across thousands of frequencies per second to evade electronic jamming.
Inter-Drone Mesh Networking: The drones communicate directly with each other rather than a ground station. If Drone-A detects an air defense system, it instantly updates the target coordinates across the entire swarm mesh. If Drone-A is destroyed, the remaining swarm automatically re-allocates mission roles dynamically.
4. Modular Airframe & Propulsion
Modern mass-production initiatives (like the Pentagon’s Drone Dominance program) prioritize cost-effective, modular structures over exquisite, expensive aerospace frames.
Materials: Carbon fiber composites or high-density 3D-printed polymers designed for rapid assembly.
Propulsion: High-KV brushless electric motors powered by solid-state or high-capacity Lithium-Polymer (LiPo) batteries for small, tactical, low-signature loitering. Larger variants utilize small gas turbines or hybrid-rotary engines for extended range.
Signatures: The geometry is explicitly shaped to minimize both Radar Cross-Section (RCS) and acoustic signatures, allowing them to approach targets completely undetected until the final seconds.
5. The Integrated Kinetic Payload (The Warhead)
Modern military philosophy dictates that an attack drone is not just a vehicle carrying a bomb—the drone is the weapon. New architectures utilize highly specialized, plug-and-play modular payloads (such as the Terminus or Common UAS Payload designs).
Electronic Safe and Arm Devices (ESAD): Microprocessor-controlled safety systems that keep the warhead completely inert until the onboard AI confirms a positive target lock and enters the terminal dive.
Directional Frag/Shaped Charges: Optimized to direct the explosive energy entirely forward into the target upon impact, maximizing lethality while minimizing the structural weight the drone has to carry.
The Functional Workflow (The Autonomy Loop)
[ Launch ] ➔ [ Visual Navigation (No GPS) ] ➔ [ Onboard AI Target Detection ]
Hello, fellow Dickhead! Autonomous weapons working beyond their creators is a constant recurring theme, even features in one of his first few short stories: The Gun by PKD in 1952.
BrilliantantTurd4361@sh.itjust.works
on 11 Jun 17:34
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Feathercrown@lemmy.world
on 11 Jun 14:02
nextcollapse
Even setting aside any apocalyptic scenarios, this is bad. You used to have to look your enemy in the eyes and stab them. Then you just had to see them from afar and shoot them. Now you don’t have to acknowledge them at all.
Most of the casualties were from bombers for a long time already, this is that but one step removed.
It’s bad for a different reason, you in this case don’t exist anymore. We used to have people killing people, now there are autonomous robots doing this, and that’s a new, completely different class of warfare.
Feathercrown@lemmy.world
on 11 Jun 15:46
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Exactly
MonkeMischief@lemmy.today
on 11 Jun 17:11
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The scariest thing is, autonomous “soldiers” can do what bombers cannot: Go building-to-building and door-to-door.
The cost and risk of urban engagements and “boots on the ground” was usually the final commitment of warfare.
marxismtomorrow@lemmy.today
on 11 Jun 14:07
nextcollapse
I’m surprised there aren’t more Ukraine defenders attempting to justify this unjustifiable war crime and step towards total extinction of humanity.
marxismtomorrow@lemmy.today
on 11 Jun 14:17
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No disagreement there, maybe Ukraine should fight their own battles though and not commit horrific war crimes and crimes against humanity to do so? Maybe Ukraine shouldn’t introduce autonomous murder drones that are objectively incapable of making the required determinations in the Geneva Convention regarding legitimate military targets? Maybe Ukraine shouldn’t give people a reason to hate it when they have such good PR from Russia’s illegal invasion?
I_Has_A_Hat@lemmy.world
on 11 Jun 14:21
nextcollapse
Maybe Russia should get the fuck out of Ukraine.
marxismtomorrow@lemmy.today
on 11 Jun 14:22
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No, I fully understood what you were trying to say. I am disagreeing and pointing out that everything you said remains irrelevant as it could literally all be stopped if Russia would get the fuck out of Ukraine.
False equivalence. Jews belonged where they were, and were part of the german population. In addition, no civilians were injured or targeted. Thus there are no war crimes. I’m not saying I am a fan of even the idea of removing people from killing people, but as the laws are currently written, there is no war crime. War crime is a very specific serious, and well defined thing. Calling things we don’t like a war crime dilutes and weakens the very term.
SpongyAneurysm@feddit.org
on 11 Jun 14:46
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Man, I’m on board with calling Ukraine out for their war crimes, as anyone should be called out, who does so.
But now you’re just making an ass of yourself.
That’s as false an equivalence as it gets. Russia is objectively the aggressor in this conflict, while a Jewish “invasion” into Gemany didn’t exist. Not even as an antisemitic fantasy.
I’m not even opposed to making Nazi comparisons, but they better be at least somewhat valid.
SpongyAneurysm@feddit.org
on 11 Jun 14:48
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So, in your opinion, war crimes are justifed, as long as the ones committing them didn’t start the conflict?
DanceMomsSavedMe@lemmy.zip
on 11 Jun 14:23
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If someone comes into my house and tries to take all my stuff I’m going to kill them.
And I’m not going to consider whether of not I’m doing it in a nice or polite way.
If you invade someone’s shit and try to steal it, you will deal with the fallout of that action.
marxismtomorrow@lemmy.today
on 11 Jun 14:30
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No. Bad drone. Keep up.
If a fire fighter breaks into your house to put out a fire and your autonomous ceiling turret shreds them who’s at fault?
Because autonomous drone systems don’t care about friend or foe, no AI model is close to good enough for that with all the processing power in the world, much less what can be shoved in any type of airborne drone.
So this is akin to booby trapping your house, leaving your house, and then assuming anyone killed by your trap was a bad guy.
Again, because you fucks don’t read RUSSIA IS THE BAD GUY, THEY DID AN ILLEGAL INVASION, ALL CURRENT MILITARY MEMBERS AND LEADERS OF RUSSIA SHOULD BE KILLED.
Now that that’s established, deal with the current discussion, not your owner’s repeated propaganda tactics.
DanceMomsSavedMe@lemmy.zip
on 11 Jun 14:42
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Things like “keep up” and " you fuckers can’t read" make you sound like a grade A collosal dickhead, by the way if that’s any concern to you.
I read just fine and see everything you said. Doesn’t change anything.
If you invade a country you fuck around and find out what that entails.
They are using them the same way shit is being used against them.
Russia hit the first civilian targets after invading them once that happens all bets are off if you come in to my country and ki my people I am going to murder yours too.
I believe that is the way it has worked for all of history.
And arguments like this present about bombs and shit too historically.
This is simply the way war evolves with the technology at hand. Keep up.
Also firefighter isn’t a black masked invader or military group lol your analogy is trash. The “booby trapping” happened after GETTING INVADED. Wasn’t there for no reason in the beginning was made as a response TO INVASION. Its simple to understand honestly.
Maybe they ought to just line up in steaight lines again like how they used to do.
And honestly what is it with these guns? You can kill someone a mile away with the right one, how inhumane! How horrible! You can’t even see the whites of their eyes this way!
I know man, maybe you can just get them to drop the weapons all together and have a dialogue instead that has always worked I can’t think of a single time in history talking it out and not responding to violence with more violence hasn’t worked out.
Yeah, would be nice, but they are fighting for their survival and russia should have never put them in this position to require this. I can’t imagine a situation where Ukraine would have come up with these if not out of necessity.
Same reason I can’t fault iran for lashing out at non-military targets because the US is illegally attacking them.
non_burglar@lemmy.world
on 11 Jun 14:19
nextcollapse
The world is a complex place and two things can be true at the same time.
marxismtomorrow@lemmy.today
on 11 Jun 14:22
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See the other replies to this comment for why Ukraine defenders believe that is not the case.
Regarding the edit, you don’t need to announce your political allegiance this explicitly, it was already obvious who you are from the original unedited comment
Nonconfrontational@lemmy.ml
on 11 Jun 15:08
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You know by defending Ukraine, you’re allying with literal nazis, right? Like goose stepping, swastika bearing Nazis?
perestroika@slrpnk.net
on 11 Jun 14:13
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They tried it, saw that it worked, and took a step back.
These days, drones with neural network based machine vision (ability to recognize targets) phone home to an operator and request a permission to attack.
The interesting bit: it is within the capability of one well-informed and well-motivated engineer or coder to create such systems. It doesn’t require a megacorps.
Then again, nothing new: mine-laying was previously within the capability of one person too. Now the mines just fly, swim or drive, and may consider on their own.
Countermeasures - blinding the device, shooting it down with an interceptor which is a bit more agile but is allowed to be considerably more dumb (in air defense, you typically have a clear target), possibly also bricking it with an electromagnetic pulse (at short range, so less than optimal). Installing nets over anything and everything. Painting false targets on random stuff and confusing patterns on real targets.
datavoid@sh.itjust.works
on 11 Jun 15:12
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Thanks chatgpt
Nonconfrontational@lemmy.ml
on 11 Jun 16:46
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Why waste your time posting slop?
CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
on 11 Jun 15:36
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Yeah, let’s hope we don’t make a habit out of this. Landmines are already bad enough.
Nouvellalia@lemmy.world
on 11 Jun 17:24
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The only thing that could have stopped this would have been the lower classes, worldwide, becoming a unified front for the last century or more. These killbots are not only here, already and being used, they will become the default within 5 years. Watch.
None of the world’s governments have lifted a finger in the last year of continuous, televised genocides of civilians, women, the elderly, and children. They certainly aren’t going to draw a line in the sand for unseen killbots that nebulously might be responsible for some civilian deaths at some point in the future.
Not only will these be used in war, these will be used in civilian life too. How do you think the world’s wealthy plan to stay that way?
They know very well that in the past when inequality has risen to these levels, they fall. They know it’s because no guards will chose them over the mass of, now angry, people that the guards were birthed from and spent their lives with.
The killbots are for you and me baby. It is already written.
MonkeMischief@lemmy.today
on 11 Jun 17:00
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It seems intriguing but is this channel legit or just a spooky clickbait kinda thing? The thumbnails didn’t inspire much confidence but also, I know it’s YouTube and you gotta play the game. (eyeroll)
threaded - newest
<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/95bb8538-a08a-414e-aaaa-baf8290b88de.jpeg">
<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/e20f0287-5cb0-46ca-9b17-37a58f058a03.gif">
<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.today/pictrs/image/4728c234-c52e-4ed0-9fa8-c390b0ca804e.gif">
2 years ago 🙄
dontthinkaboutit.dontthinkaboutit.dontthinkaboutit.dontthinkaboutit.dontthinkaboutit.
Militaries are famously secretive.
I’m glad they, allegedly, stopped after the one test. This sounds an awful lot like a war crime on Ukraine’s part. Enemy combatants (especially since we know most of Russia’s army are being trafficked) need the opportunity to surrender peacefully.
Pretty sure it’s not a war crime yet. Damn sure it should be. Human in the loop. Update Geneva conventions.
In this role, it should already be covered under the Anti-Personnel Mine Ban Convention IMO.
Drones that kill anyone entering an area are just more sophisticated land mines.
Perhaps (and the uncertainty is part of the problem), but a more general scope is needed. If it’s AI arguments will be made that no-one is responsible. Someone should be responsible for people getting killed, and justify themselves if needed, and face consequences if they cannot.
As if having a human in the loop would make slaughtering people more humanitarian. How many reports have we read of soldiers from any power perpetrating horrendous acts on enemy combatants, or worse, civilians?
I agree that murder without prejudice should be curtailed if at all possible and that autonomous robots are not likely to accept surrender, but it’s not like human agressors are always open to it either.
Not saying it’s good, or humanitarian. War crimes don’t stop war (much as I would prefer it all to be called murder rather than state sanctioned violence). The Geneva accords create a bottom level of godawful that is unacceptable that the various militaries agree on. Hopefully it helps protects civilians and soldiers both. AI weapons are a plausible existential threat, they should be treated as such, also, importantly, they are also a vector for plausible deniability.
‘Humans in the loop’ could also provide a level of friction that might make atrocities less common as the commanders cover their asses by putting responsibility on those lower down in the hierarchy, who might choose not to. The only reason nuclear war didn’t happen in the 60s was one person saying NO
Of course, the US is (likely) currently bombing civilian water supplies, so we need to drag ourselves back up to basic humanity (and yes, humanity is anything but basic as history attends).
This needs to be addressed criminally later.
One can hope.
Hague invasion act
I think that’s really what it all comes down to, is the lack of surrender by a system that could eventually be able to make choices on the fly. You’re right though, in the end it’s not more humanitarian by any means. I suppose it removes a little bit of the sting and I guess If you’re able to pull off the mental gymnastics of being able to convince yourself that a computer program taking out a bunch of people in one go is less of a burden to carry on the conscious but I bet it’s a lot to carry for those that have to program and command the actions to happen and for the ones that actually have to engage with those systems.
maybe simply this didn’t work well enough for it to be worth the effort. there were already surrenders to drones (rare) there’s no reason why automated drone couldn’t do it as well
No, there’s been advances in the program since its inception. They’re still in use.
Sweet summer child, no they did not stop. And these things move fast and attack fast, just like missiles; there’s no time for surrender.
It’s been years, no one watches that anymore.
Military training exists to brainwash decent human beings with a sense of morality and critical thinking abilities, who know they mustn’t kill and would refuse requests to kill, into killing machines who are proud to follow orders (and then experience PTSD when they’re returned to civilian life and realize what they’ve done).
Therefore, I contend that fully autonomous drones have killed human beings since wars have been a thing, and those drones are called “soldiers”.
This is factually inaccurate.
A much better predictor for PTSD is crimes against humanity committed. Killing in war, when necessary is almost “free”.
It’s thinking like that that’s the reason war still exists. Everybody thinks killing is awful, apart in certain circumstances when it’s okay, when it’s in fact never okay.
User name checks out.
I was specifically talking about PTSD. War exists for real world reasons. Most of which aren’t a desire for human suffering. A worldview of good and evil just doesn’t do reality justice and discards the human suffering caused by your and anyone’s actions.
Killing the Russians executing your dad and raping your mom is not ok?
Killing the Israeli soldier shooting indescriminately at children is not ok?
I can barely see you up there on that high horse.
Nope these make the choices. Ai driven 99.999%
When deployed, the drone is launched into a designated hunt-zone. It navigates purely via visual landmarks. The onboard AI constantly screens the video feed. When an object matches its classification matrix (e.g., a specific mobile missile launcher), the system locks onto the pixel coordinate, arms the ESAD, and executes a terminal dive completely independent of human input.
This tightly integrated anatomy of Edge Compute + Computer Vision + Modular Lethality is what defines the reality of autonomous robotic warfare today.
That’s what they’re saying:
When deployed, the soldier is launched into a designated hunt-zone. He navigates purely via visual landmarks. His brain constantly screens the nerve data from his eyes. When an object matches its classification matrix (e.g., a specific mobile missile launcher), the organism locks onto the pixel coordinate, arms the ESAD, and executes a terminal dive completely dependent on human input.
I don’t understand are you agreeing with me or quoting me because that’s not from the article, that’s from my Ai prompt that I run through gemini and then ask questions.
You didn’t understand that they took your comment and applied it to a human instead of a computerized drone?
You didn’t understand that they took your comment and applied it to a human instead of a computerized drone?
I mean, they used AI to generate their last comment. If there were ever a good example of AI eroding the capability for thought…
Fun and interesting take, as far as commentary on soldiers.
These new fully autonomous drones though, are able to be mass produced by Capital. That’s the important difference. It means that there is a nascent way, to bypass the need to have a country with high births to fuel a war machine, and you can just more easily Capital your way to domination.
And that’s kinda scary.
Luckily we don’t live in a world yet where capital can make those drones without labor. Until we do they will still need the populace as a whole.
So are soldiers, to be fair.
No, the psychological training to get people to kill each other without thinking is new. Before the 1960’s it was common for soldiers to purposely miss. The desensitising and psychological training of shooting at human targets without thinking changed modern warfare and turned people into killing machines.
This is why I stopped playing ARC. Felt like it was just conditioning to prefer shooting-on-sight than being friendly. That or being a sociopath and lying and shooting someone in the back.
Neither of which are properties I like to even play pretend having.
You’re very correct in your comment, btw. Nowadays US uses methods that condition people so well that the shoot-to-kill amount of soldiers is like ~95%. In WWII (and everything preceding it) it was roughly 2% of men who were quite literally psychopaths (not in the criminal sense, but a sense of being able to turn off their empathy, many surgeons and ceos belong to this group of ppl). Only <25% of soldiers in a position to fire at the enemy actually shot at them. About 1% of US fighter pilots accounted for ~50% their kills.
Lindybeige has what I think is a fairly good video on the subject.
Shooting to kill - how many men can do it
No video? They did not know what the Ai chose until it sent a manned vehicle to check it out. That’s extraordinarily concerning.
I suppose that’s the point of it - no comms at all so can’t be jammed.
In the current landscape of military technology, what the public conceptually calls “terminator drones” refers to Lethal Autonomous Weapon Systems (LAWS), One-Way Attack (OWA) uncrewed aerial systems, and Collaborative Combat Aircraft (CCA).
Because modern electronic warfare (EW) can instantly sever radio control and jam GPS, these systems cannot rely on a human pilot or cloud computing. They are designed as self-contained, edge-computing robotic hunters.
The physical and technological anatomy of a modern autonomous combat drone is categorized into five core systems:
1. The Neural Architecture (Edge AI Compute Core)
The “brain” is no longer a simple autopilot board; it is an onboard AI accelerator optimized for computer vision and localized decision-making.
2. The Sensor Suite (The Perception Layer)
To operate in “denied environments” where GPS is jammed, the drone relies on a fused sensory array to build an internal map of the world.
3. The EW-Resistant Communications & Swarm Mesh
When drones operate collectively, they utilize decentralized mesh networking.
4. Modular Airframe & Propulsion
Modern mass-production initiatives (like the Pentagon’s Drone Dominance program) prioritize cost-effective, modular structures over exquisite, expensive aerospace frames.
5. The Integrated Kinetic Payload (The Warhead)
Modern military philosophy dictates that an attack drone is not just a vehicle carrying a bomb—the drone is the weapon. New architectures utilize highly specialized, plug-and-play modular payloads (such as the Terminus or Common UAS Payload designs).
The Functional Workflow (The Autonomy Loop)
[ Launch ] ➔ [ Visual Navigation (No GPS) ] ➔ [ Onboard AI Target Detection ]Ok.
Thanks, ChatGPT.
No it’s a custom Gemini prompt persona.
Stop spamming this slop.
Hasn’t anyone seen Screamers (1995)? Or read Second Variety?
I ❤️ Dick
Hello, fellow Dickhead! Autonomous weapons working beyond their creators is a constant recurring theme, even features in one of his first few short stories: The Gun by PKD in 1952.
Ty!
Slaughterbots
7 years, only becoming more plausible.
Even setting aside any apocalyptic scenarios, this is bad. You used to have to look your enemy in the eyes and stab them. Then you just had to see them from afar and shoot them. Now you don’t have to acknowledge them at all.
Most of the casualties were from bombers for a long time already, this is that but one step removed.
It’s bad for a different reason, you in this case don’t exist anymore. We used to have people killing people, now there are autonomous robots doing this, and that’s a new, completely different class of warfare.
Exactly
The scariest thing is, autonomous “soldiers” can do what bombers cannot: Go building-to-building and door-to-door.
The cost and risk of urban engagements and “boots on the ground” was usually the final commitment of warfare.
I’m surprised there aren’t more Ukraine defenders attempting to justify this unjustifiable war crime and step towards total extinction of humanity.
Edit: The nazis have arrived.
Russia needs to get the fuck out of Ukraine
No disagreement there, maybe Ukraine should fight their own battles though and not commit horrific war crimes and crimes against humanity to do so? Maybe Ukraine shouldn’t introduce autonomous murder drones that are objectively incapable of making the required determinations in the Geneva Convention regarding legitimate military targets? Maybe Ukraine shouldn’t give people a reason to hate it when they have such good PR from Russia’s illegal invasion?
Maybe Russia should get the fuck out of Ukraine.
Reread, try again.
No, I fully understood what you were trying to say. I am disagreeing and pointing out that everything you said remains irrelevant as it could literally all be stopped if Russia would get the fuck out of Ukraine.
Oh you sweet innocent troll… Nice ragebait…
False equivalence. Jews belonged where they were, and were part of the german population. In addition, no civilians were injured or targeted. Thus there are no war crimes. I’m not saying I am a fan of even the idea of removing people from killing people, but as the laws are currently written, there is no war crime. War crime is a very specific serious, and well defined thing. Calling things we don’t like a war crime dilutes and weakens the very term.
Man, I’m on board with calling Ukraine out for their war crimes, as anyone should be called out, who does so.
But now you’re just making an ass of yourself.
That’s as false an equivalence as it gets. Russia is objectively the aggressor in this conflict, while a Jewish “invasion” into Gemany didn’t exist. Not even as an antisemitic fantasy.
I’m not even opposed to making Nazi comparisons, but they better be at least somewhat valid.
So, in your opinion, war crimes are justifed, as long as the ones committing them didn’t start the conflict?
If someone comes into my house and tries to take all my stuff I’m going to kill them.
And I’m not going to consider whether of not I’m doing it in a nice or polite way.
If you invade someone’s shit and try to steal it, you will deal with the fallout of that action.
No. Bad drone. Keep up.
If a fire fighter breaks into your house to put out a fire and your autonomous ceiling turret shreds them who’s at fault?
Because autonomous drone systems don’t care about friend or foe, no AI model is close to good enough for that with all the processing power in the world, much less what can be shoved in any type of airborne drone.
So this is akin to booby trapping your house, leaving your house, and then assuming anyone killed by your trap was a bad guy.
Again, because you fucks don’t read RUSSIA IS THE BAD GUY, THEY DID AN ILLEGAL INVASION, ALL CURRENT MILITARY MEMBERS AND LEADERS OF RUSSIA SHOULD BE KILLED.
Now that that’s established, deal with the current discussion, not your owner’s repeated propaganda tactics.
Things like “keep up” and " you fuckers can’t read" make you sound like a grade A collosal dickhead, by the way if that’s any concern to you.
I read just fine and see everything you said. Doesn’t change anything.
If you invade a country you fuck around and find out what that entails.
They are using them the same way shit is being used against them.
Russia hit the first civilian targets after invading them once that happens all bets are off if you come in to my country and ki my people I am going to murder yours too.
I believe that is the way it has worked for all of history.
And arguments like this present about bombs and shit too historically.
This is simply the way war evolves with the technology at hand. Keep up.
Also firefighter isn’t a black masked invader or military group lol your analogy is trash. The “booby trapping” happened after GETTING INVADED. Wasn’t there for no reason in the beginning was made as a response TO INVASION. Its simple to understand honestly.
Maybe they ought to just line up in steaight lines again like how they used to do.
And honestly what is it with these guns? You can kill someone a mile away with the right one, how inhumane! How horrible! You can’t even see the whites of their eyes this way!
I know man, maybe you can just get them to drop the weapons all together and have a dialogue instead that has always worked I can’t think of a single time in history talking it out and not responding to violence with more violence hasn’t worked out.
Yeah, would be nice, but they are fighting for their survival and russia should have never put them in this position to require this. I can’t imagine a situation where Ukraine would have come up with these if not out of necessity.
Same reason I can’t fault iran for lashing out at non-military targets because the US is illegally attacking them.
The world is a complex place and two things can be true at the same time.
See the other replies to this comment for why Ukraine defenders believe that is not the case.
Ooohh, look, the tankies have arrived!
So tell me, where do you get your nonsense information from, exactly?
Also, how do I train in the mental gymnastics to flatten my brain so that I can believe in obvious nonsense too?
America is the good guys! Trump is just an abberation and not a reflection of the bloodthirsty nation we are and always were!!!
Regarding the edit, you don’t need to announce your political allegiance this explicitly, it was already obvious who you are from the original unedited comment
You know by defending Ukraine, you’re allying with literal nazis, right? Like goose stepping, swastika bearing Nazis?
this ones, right?
<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/24057881-5d89-4128-a9f5-6c95970307cc.png">
Oh, wait, no, those actually Russians that attacked Ukraine.
Oh, maybe this one?
<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/7c77a9a8-a726-4eda-8b64-9c21a389841a.png">
Damn, no, it’s also Russian one.
lol
They tried it, saw that it worked, and took a step back.
These days, drones with neural network based machine vision (ability to recognize targets) phone home to an operator and request a permission to attack.
The interesting bit: it is within the capability of one well-informed and well-motivated engineer or coder to create such systems. It doesn’t require a megacorps.
Then again, nothing new: mine-laying was previously within the capability of one person too. Now the mines just fly, swim or drive, and may consider on their own.
Countermeasures - blinding the device, shooting it down with an interceptor which is a bit more agile but is allowed to be considerably more dumb (in air defense, you typically have a clear target), possibly also bricking it with an electromagnetic pulse (at short range, so less than optimal). Installing nets over anything and everything. Painting false targets on random stuff and confusing patterns on real targets.
Thanks chatgpt
Why waste your time posting slop?
Yeah, let’s hope we don’t make a habit out of this. Landmines are already bad enough.
The only thing that could have stopped this would have been the lower classes, worldwide, becoming a unified front for the last century or more. These killbots are not only here, already and being used, they will become the default within 5 years. Watch.
None of the world’s governments have lifted a finger in the last year of continuous, televised genocides of civilians, women, the elderly, and children. They certainly aren’t going to draw a line in the sand for unseen killbots that nebulously might be responsible for some civilian deaths at some point in the future.
Not only will these be used in war, these will be used in civilian life too. How do you think the world’s wealthy plan to stay that way?
They know very well that in the past when inequality has risen to these levels, they fall. They know it’s because no guards will chose them over the mass of, now angry, people that the guards were birthed from and spent their lives with.
The killbots are for you and me baby. It is already written.
The problem with land mines is that they exist after the conflict.
Slaughterbots - If human: kill() explores the consequences of this.
It seems intriguing but is this channel legit or just a spooky clickbait kinda thing? The thumbnails didn’t inspire much confidence but also, I know it’s YouTube and you gotta play the game. (eyeroll)
I’ve never heard of this org before though.