Tag: US Army

  • US army experimenting with generative AI chatbots in war games: Report

    US army experimenting with generative AI chatbots in war games: Report

    The United States Army Research Laboratory is experimenting to see whether OpenAI’s generative AI solutions can help battle planning, but within a military video game.
    The New Scientist on Wednesday reported how US Army researchers are using OpenAI’s GPT-4 Turbo and GPT-4 Vision models to provide information about simulated battlefield terrain and details on friendly and enemy forces, as well as military lessons on attacking and defending. They also used two other AI models based on older technology. After that, they gave the AI assistants a mission to destroy all enemy forces and seize an objective point.
    The AI assistants immediately outputted many courses of action, at which point, a user playing the role of a commander asked the model to refine that output. While OpenAI’s GPT models worked better than the other two models, they also caused more casualties while carrying out mission objectives.
    The use of generative AI is just one small part of the US Army’s push to take full advantage of artificial intelligence in their strategy. Project Maven, the US Department of Defense’s flagship AI effort, has located rocket launchers in Yemen and surface vessels in the Res Sea and helped narrow targets for strikes in Iraq and Syria, reported Bloomberg in February.
    But this potential use of AI on battlefields also raise many ethical concerns. The prospect of leaving decisions that could potentially kill people to machines is more reminiscent of the Terminator series of movies than that of a bright future espoused by AI evangelists. But that has not stopped the military. The Pentagon asked US lawmakers for billions of dollars to develop its artificial intelligence and networking capabilities, reported DefenseScoop in March. It has also established a Chief Digital and AI Officer positions to help use and spread the technology across the department.
    ChatGPT-maker OpenAI confronting a mountain of legal challenges
    After a year of basking in global fame, the San Francisco company OpenAI is now confronting a multitude of challenges that could threaten its position at the vanguard of artificial intelligence research. Some of its conflicts stem from decisions made well before the debut of ChatGPT, particularly its unusual shift from an idealistic nonprofit to a big business backed by billions of dollars in investments.
    It’s too early to tell if OpenAI and its attorneys will beat back a barrage of lawsuits from Elon Musk, The New York Times and bestselling novelists such as John Grisham, not to mention escalating scrutiny from government regulators, or if any of it will stick.

  • US Army suspends discharging immigrant recruits

    US Army suspends discharging immigrant recruits

    WASHINGTON(TIP): The U.S. army has for now suspended its practice of quietly discharging immigrant recruits, according to a news report published in newspapers.

    An Associate Press report said that Marshal Williams, an assistant secretary of the Army, ordered high-ranking officials to suspend the processing of separations in a July 20 memo.

    The news comes one month after the AP reported the Army had discharged dozens of immigrant recruits and reservists, putting their immigration status at risk.

    “It’s an admission by the Army that they’ve improperly discharged hundreds of soldiers,” immigration attorney and former Army Reserve officer Margaret Stock, who helped create the program, told the AP on Wednesday. “The next step should be go back and rescind the people who were improperly discharged.”

    Many immigrant recruits told the AP last month they were not given a reason for their discharges or said they were labeled as a security risk because of their relatives abroad.

    Reports estimate there are around 10,000 Army recruits currently serving as part of the program, which offers a pathway to citizenship, according to the AP.

    The discharges inflamed immigration activists last month, who pointed to the policy as another example of escalating anti-immigration sentiment under President Trump.

    It is unclear if the Army will resume discharging immigrant recruits, and the AP reported none of those already separated have been reinstated.