Pentagon: AI and Classified Data, a Risky Bet
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The Pentagon and Generative AI: A Step Towards Secure Environments
The Pentagon is considering the creation of secure environments for generative AI companies to train military versions of their models on classified data. This initiative, reported by MIT Technology Review, aims to enable models like Claude, developed by Anthropic, to train on sensitive information. Currently, these models are already being used to answer questions in classified contexts, including analyzing targets in Iran.
Training AI models on classified data represents a significant development, as it integrates sensitive intelligence directly into algorithms. This intelligence includes surveillance reports and battlefield assessments, bringing AI companies closer to classified data than ever before, while posing unique security risks.
Nuclear Reactors: New Challenges for Waste Management
Nuclear waste management is currently as creative as it is varied, with methods such as immersion in water pools, encasement in steel, or burial hundreds of meters underground. However, the advent of new types of nuclear reactors could introduce new challenges. These next-generation reactors, with their innovative designs and materials, will require tailored engineering solutions to handle an expanded range of nuclear waste types.
Uncrewed Narco Submarines: A New Era of Trafficking
For decades, handmade narco submarines have been among the most elusive and productive in the cocaine trade, transporting tons of drugs from Colombia to the rest of the world. Today, off-the-shelf technologies, such as Starlink terminals, plug-and-play nautical autopilots, and high-resolution video cameras, could evolve this game of cat and mouse into a new phase.
Uncrewed submarines could transport more cocaine over longer distances without endangering human smugglers. Law enforcement agencies are just beginning to grapple with the implications of this technological evolution in drug trafficking.
Other Tech News
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Nvidia has joined the OpenClaw craze with the launch of NemoClaw, adding privacy and security to the AI agent platform.
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Microsoft is considering legal action regarding the cloud agreement between Amazon and OpenAI, citing a potential breach of its exclusive partnership.
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The Pentagon aims to mass-produce drones used to strike Iran. The kamikaze drone, called Lucas, is a copy of Iran's Shahed UAV.
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U.S. officials claim that Anthropic cannot be trusted with combat systems, seeking to exclude the AI company from all government agencies.
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China penalizes individuals linked to Meta's acquisition of Manus to prevent Chinese AI leaders from relocating.
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DeepSeek appears to be quietly testing a next-generation AI model, with an official launch imminent.
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Meta will end VR access to Horizon Worlds in June, a flagship project notorious for sexual harassment.
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Sensor surveillance is transforming consumer technology into tracking tools for police, turning our personal devices into digital informants.
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Two lawsuits could transform social media for the better, targeting the dangers that platforms pose to children.
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A DNA discovery suggests that humanity may have been seeded from space, with an asteroid potentially carrying the ingredients for life on Earth.
Quote of the Day
“It is now the largest, most popular, most successful open-source project in human history. It is definitely the next ChatGPT.” — Nvidia's CEO explains to CNBC why OpenClaw is a major breakthrough for AI.
Pentagon's Adaptation to Chinese Technology
Just over a year ago, Kathleen Hicks left her position as Deputy Secretary of Defense of the United States. As the highest-ranking woman in Pentagon history, Hicks shaped the U.S. military posture through an era defined by renewed competition among powerful nations and a race to modernize defense technology.
In a conversation with MIT Technology Review, Hicks reflects on how the Pentagon is adapting—or failing to adapt—to a new era of geopolitical competition. She discusses China's technological rise, the future of AI in warfare, and her flagship initiative: Replicator.
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