Exclusive: AI Just Controlled a Military Plane for the First Time Ever – My Comments
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[There is much ago about AI in warfare. But in many respects AI has already been appearing in war even since WW2. For example proximity fuses are a definite form of logic and "thought" in a basic way. You fire the shell, but the shell has to determine at what point it needs to explode. I have my skepticism about how effective AI will be. One area where it could "kill", literally, is with SPEED. Anything related to speed of reactions and even accuracy is where a human can be beaten by a machine. But it gets much more complex than that. Computers themselves have been used in war as has formed of electronic technology. The fact that weapons will become ever more complex is a fact. This has benefits, but it also has problems. My own views are not fully formed on this matter. I do think it is somewhat overblown. This is basically about computer programming – that's what is being discussed here. There is excellent news for Whites hidden in this though. đ Jan]
The U.S. Air Force flew an artificial intelligence (AI) copilot on a U-2 spy plane in California.
The flight marked the first time in the history of the Department of Defense that an AI took flight aboard a military aircraft.
The AI algorithm, developed by Air Combat Commandâs U-2 Federal Laboratory, trained the AI to execute specific in-flight tasks that would otherwise be done by the pilot.
On December 15, the United States Air Force successfully flew an AI copilot on a U-2 spy plane in California, marking the first time AI has controlled a U.S. military system. In this Popular Mechanics exclusive, Dr. Will Roper, the Assistant Secretary of the Air Force for Acquisition, Technology and Logistics, reveals how he and his team made history.
Teaming artificial intelligence (AI) with pilots is no longer just a matter for science fiction or blockbuster movies. On Tuesday, December 15, the Air Force successfully flew an AI copilot on a U-2 spy plane in California: the first time AI has controlled a U.S. military system.
Completing over a million training runs prior, the flight was a small step for the computerized copilot, but itâs a giant leap for âcomputerkindâ in future military operations.
The U.S. military has historically struggled developing digital capabilities. Itâs hard to believe difficult-to-code computers and hard-to-access dataâmuch less AIâheld back the worldâs most lethal hardware not so long ago in an Air Force not far, far away.
But starting three years ago, the Air Force took its own giant leap toward the digital age. Finally cracking the code on military software, we built the Pentagonâs first commercially-inspired development teams, coding clouds, and even a combat internet that downed a cruise missile at blistering machine speeds. But our recent AI demo is one for military record books and science fiction fans alike.
With call sign ARTU”, we trained ”Zeroâa world-leading computer program that dominates chess, Go, and even video games without prior knowledge of their rulesâto operate a U-2 spy plane. Though lacking those lively beeps and squeaks, ARTU” surpassed its motion picture namesake in one distinctive feature: it was the mission commander, the final decision authority on the human-machine team. And given the high stakes of global AI, surpassing science fiction must become our military norm.
Our demo flew a reconnaissance mission during a simulated missile strike at Beale Air Force Base on Tuesday. ARTU” searched for enemy launchers while our pilot searched for threatening aircraft, both sharing the U-2âs radar. With no pilot override, ARTU” made final calls on devoting the radar to missile hunting versus self-protection. Luke Skywalker certainly never took such orders from his X-Wing sidekick!
The fact ARTU” was in command was less about any particular mission than how completely our military must embrace AI to maintain the battlefield decision advantage. Unlike Han Soloâs ânever-tell-me-the-oddsâ snub of C-3POâs asteroid field survival rate (approximately 3,720 to 1), our warfighters need to know the odds in dizzyingly-complex combat scenarios. Teaming with trusted AI across all facets of conflictâeven occasionally putting it in chargeâcould tip those odds in our favor.
But to trust AI, software design is key. Like a breaker box for code, the U-2 gave ARTU” complete radar control while âswitching offâ access to other subsystems. Had the scenario been navigating an asteroid fieldâor more likely field of enemy radarsâthose âon-offâ switches could adjust. The design allows operators to choose what AI wonât do to accept the operational risk of what it will. Creating this software breaker boxâinstead of Pandoraâsâhas been an Air Force journey of more than a few parsecs.
The journey began early in 2018, when I approved a hoodie-wearing Air Force team (fittingly named Kessel Run for a Star Wars smuggling route) to âsmuggleâ commercial DevSecOps software practices into our Air Operations Center. By merging development, security, and operations using modern information technology, DevSecOps produced higher-quality code faster and more continuously. Sounds perfect for a digitally-challenged Pentagon, right?
Youâd think. Kessel Run bent all the rules and definitely âshot firstâ at the Pentagonâs fixation on five-year development plans with crippling baselines. As Han Solo advocated, keeping momentum sometimes required a good blaster at our side. Thankfully, Kessel Runâs results were game-changing, outpacing previous programs and inspiring a generation of Air Force and Space Force DevSecOps teams, including our U-2 FedLab.
"Given the high stakes of global AI, surpassing science fiction must become our military norm."
But coding effectively is only one element of trusted AI design. A year later, I directed a Service-wide adoption of coding clouds using landmark technologies containerization and Kubernetes. Containers virtualize and isolate everything code needs to run for Kubernetes then to orchestrate, selectively powering disparate software like a dynamic-but-secure breaker box.
Running ARTU” containers in our FedLab cloud also proved they would run identically on the U-2âno lengthy safety or interference checks required! This is how we get evolving softwareâespecially AIâout of our clouds and safely onto planes flying through them.
Yet this trusted design didnât create ARTU”âs copilot abilities. You have to train for that. Like a digital Yoda, our small-but-mighty U-2 FedLab trained ”Zeroâs gaming algorithms to operate a radarâreconstructing them to learn the good side of reconnaissance (enemies found) from the dark side (U-2s lost)âall while interacting with a pilot. Running over a million training simulations at their âdigital Dagobah,â they had ARTU” mission-ready in just over a month.
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