https://www.upi.com/Defense-News/20...n-in-simulated-aerial-dogfight/6211598025303/
So there was a competition at DARPA with AI developers who spent the week having their AI's battle it out and at the end the winning AI would go up against a real pilot in a simulation - it apparently defeated the human easily.
Now as the article states there were several things going for the AI - perfect situational awareness for one which gave it a leg up apparently but i believe this is still big and inevitable.
So AI development proceeds ever faster and faster - 20 years ago the concept was still pure science fiction and now it's beating humans. Still in virtual environments of course but give it another 20 years and humans may not be able to outfight an AI in these cases where it is able to control an appropriate machine (full in Terminator Exoskeletons may still take some time).
I wonder what this means for both military and civilian applications? I know i can't wait for an AI to truly start cleaning and organizing my place so i don't have to but at some point will we readily accept autonomous AI's that can kill people on their own once released into a battlezone or will we pass an amendment to the Geneva Convention forbidding autonomous killing power.
So there was a competition at DARPA with AI developers who spent the week having their AI's battle it out and at the end the winning AI would go up against a real pilot in a simulation - it apparently defeated the human easily.
Now as the article states there were several things going for the AI - perfect situational awareness for one which gave it a leg up apparently but i believe this is still big and inevitable.
So AI development proceeds ever faster and faster - 20 years ago the concept was still pure science fiction and now it's beating humans. Still in virtual environments of course but give it another 20 years and humans may not be able to outfight an AI in these cases where it is able to control an appropriate machine (full in Terminator Exoskeletons may still take some time).
I wonder what this means for both military and civilian applications? I know i can't wait for an AI to truly start cleaning and organizing my place so i don't have to but at some point will we readily accept autonomous AI's that can kill people on their own once released into a battlezone or will we pass an amendment to the Geneva Convention forbidding autonomous killing power.