I, warbot : the dawn of artificially intelligent conflict / Kenneth Payne
By: Payne, Kenneth [author].
Contributor(s): Ohio Library and Information Network.
Publisher: New York, NY : Oxford University Press, ©2021Description: (ix, 321 pages).Content type: text Media type: computer ISBN: 9780197611692.Subject(s): Military robots | Artificial intelligence -- Military applications | Robotics -- Military applicationsGenre/Form: Electronic books | Print books.Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
On Shelf | UG479 .P39 2021 (Browse shelf) | Available | AU00000000018815 |
Browsing Alfaisal University Shelves , Shelving location: On Shelf Close shelf browser
UB251.G7 F47 2020 Behind the enigma : the authorised history of GCHQ, Britain's secret cyber-intelligence agency / | UB275 .I5465 2020 Information warfare in the age of cyber conflict / | UG400 .W35 2018 Walls : a history of civilization in blood and brick / | UG479 .P39 2021 I, warbot : the dawn of artificially intelligent conflict / | UG479 .S38 2023 Four battlegrounds : power in the age of artificial intelligence / | UG1242 .D7B35 2016 Building your own drones : a beginner's guide to drones, UAVs, and ROVs / | UG1242.D7 B47 2016 Smart autonomous aircraft : flight control and planning for UAV / |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 279-298) and index
Introduction: a call to arms -- How to build a warbot -- Deep warbots -- i-Battle is joined -- Minds make strategy -- The art of i-War -- Human-machine teams -- Rules for warbots -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Acknowledgements -- Index
Available to OhioLINK libraries.
"Artificial Intelligence is going to war. Intelligent military systems are already reshaping conflict--from the chaos of battle, with pilotless drones and robot tanks, to the headquarters far from the action, where generals and politicians use technology to weigh up what to do. AI changes how we fight, and even how likely it is that we will. Warbots will be faster, more agile and more deadly than today's crewed weapons. New tactics are already emerging, but much deeper thinking is needed. When will an intelligent machine escalate, and how might you deter it? Can robots predict the future? And what happens to the 'art of war' as machines become creative? An international campaign against 'killer robots' hopes to ban AI from conflict. But the genie is out--autonomous weapons are too useful for states to outlaw. Still, crafting sensible rules for our warbots is possible. This fascinating book shows how it might be done."--