cross-posted from: piefed.social/…/china-reveals-200-strong-ai-drone…
The PLA just introduced a new weapon in the drone arms race.
Submitted 1 day ago by Gsus4@programming.dev to technology@lemmy.world
cross-posted from: piefed.social/…/china-reveals-200-strong-ai-drone…
The PLA just introduced a new weapon in the drone arms race.
I’m noticing the term “intelligent algorithm”, which suggests a more traditional programming approach than offloading decision making to a LLM.
That makes more sense to me anyways. What training set of text would that even base off of?
Take a lesson from Star Wars Episode 1
Took a quick view of their articles. Tomshardware have become very politicized lately…
Enemy Swarm inbound.
tonytins@pawb.social 1 day ago
Meanwhile, America is like, “let’s have spellcheck write our laws.”
jbloggs777@discuss.tchncs.de 20 hours ago
One of the interesting use-cases for LLMs is to find potential inconsistencies (across many sources), brainstorm abuse vectors & potential legal challenges, and then rewrite natural (including legal) language in a less ambiguous way. If this process were guided and vetted by talented lawmakers, it could be quite a useful tool, and is probably already used that way in many quarters.
The current executive will almost certainly abuse it and come up with hilariously bad proposals, vetted only by a marketing team, which will be ridiculed for years to come. Popcorn time.
PrivateNoob@sopuli.xyz 18 hours ago
It’s not in english (page translation), but Ukraine also uses AI drones where these are apparently made by an US company.
telex.hu/…/ukrajna-mesterseges-intelligencia-dron…