Hyperwar

From HandWiki
Short description: AI-controlled warfare without human decision making

Hyperwar (portmanteau from the Ancient Greek preposition and prefix ὑπέρ "beyond" and the English "war") is a term coined by John R. Allen and Amir Husain which refers to algorithmic or "AI"-controlled warfare with little to no human decision making.[1][2] Due to the autonomous nature of AI, it could rapidly increase the speed of warfare, especially if more than one side is relying on AI.[1] AI is not limited to new weapons such as drones or cyberwar, it can affect all forms of military planning.[1]

See also

Links

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Allen, John; West, Darrell; Institution, Brookings (2020-07-12). "Op-ed: Hyperwar is coming. America needs to bring AI into the fight to win - with caution". https://www.cnbc.com/2020/07/12/why-america-needs-to-bring-ai-into-the-upcoming-hyperwar-to-win.html. 
  2. Husain, Amir; Allen, John R.; Work, Robert O.; Cole, August; Scharre, Paul; Anderson, Wendy R.; Porter, Bruce; Townsend, Jim (2018). Hyperwar : conflict and competition in the AI century. Austin, Texas. ISBN 978-1-7325970-0-6. OCLC 1099536594.