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OpenAI, US Defense Contractor Anduril to Co-Develop Military AI and Drone Technology

They have partnered with US defense contractor Anduril to address national security challenges through AI. Their first engagement was on anti-drone technology and is hoping to build tools using AI that can identify and react in real-time to threats from unmanned aircraft. By combining OpenAI’s machine-learning models with Anduril’s expertise in military hardware and software, […]

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OpenAI, US Defense Contractor Anduril to Co-Develop Military AI and Drone Technology

They have partnered with US defense contractor Anduril to address national security challenges through AI. Their first engagement was on anti-drone technology and is hoping to build tools using AI that can identify and react in real-time to threats from unmanned aircraft. By combining OpenAI’s machine-learning models with Anduril’s expertise in military hardware and software, the goal is to enable faster and smarter responses to potential dangers.

As the competition for AI supremacy continues to hot up around the world, especially between the US and China, the stakes in national security are high. It is considered a transformative force in defense, but there are serious concerns about its safety and trustworthiness, particularly in life-or-death situations.

Both of them underline how they work to use AI responsibly. The technology is being designed so that it allows the military teams to take decisions that are informed and fast but democratic-aligned, they said.

This marks a huge shift for OpenAI, which began life as a nonprofit dedicated to careful development of AI. OpenAI has, over time, emerged to be one of the leaders that make AI available to all sections of people but with very keen oversight. Partnering with Anduril also shows Silicon Valley returning to its defense roots by relating to its early days as a centre of military technology. Not all tech firms follow this route, as evidenced by the internal opposition mounting in companies like Google in reaction to their military deals.

It is, however, not the only one looking at this space; last month, AI rival Anthropic launched an alliance with Palantir to get its AI tools to US defense agencies. Growing defense-tech partnerships underscore the growing integration of AI into military strategies.

Those innovational technologies might revolutionize national security, but still, they raise very sensitive ethical questions. How does one ensure that AI does come handy responsibly? What risks with these technologies? As partnership networks expand, it will soon be important to find equilibrium between technological advancement and also ethical responsibility.

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