What happens if the Air Force's AI fighter jets GO ROGUE?

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  • Опубликовано: 16 май 2024
  • Go to ground.news/Sandboxx to stay fully informed on military developments around the world. Subscribe through my link right now for 40% off their Vantage Plan, which is what I use everyday.
    -- BREAK -- defensescoop.com/2023/04/07/n...
    Earlier this month, Air Force Secretary Frank Kendall made history, riding in the cockpit of an AI-piloted F-16 Fighting Falcon through a series of simulated close-quarters air-to-air engagements, more commonly known as good old-fashioned dogfights.
    According to Kendall, the AI in control of his aircraft was evenly matched with the human F-16 pilot it was squaring off against, and we're not talking about any ordinary pilot... We're talking about an Air Force Test Pilot with thousands of hours logged in that specific fighter.
    This has spurred a great deal of discussion about the implications of AI in combat, much of which has centered around concerns that the systems we devise to wage war for us, may ultimately wage war on us instead.
    So in Part 1 of our dive into this topic, let's talk about what AI really is, including what it's capable of, and what it isn't.
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    Citations:
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    defensescoop.com/2024/05/08/k...
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    www.afcent.af.mil/Units/378th...
    www.f-16.net/index.php?module...
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    www.coursera.org/articles/typ...
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    www.sandboxx.us/news/airpower...
    blogs.evergreen.edu/cpat/files...
    api.repository.cam.ac.uk/serv...
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    defensescoop.com/2023/04/07/n...
    www.twz.com/air/navys-vision-...
    defensescoop.com/2024/02/02/s...
    www.avinc.com/lms/switchblade...
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    www.af.mil/News/Article-Displ...
    builtin.com/artificial-intell...
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    www.sandboxx.us/news/tech/tod...
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Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @SandboxxApp
    @SandboxxApp  16 дней назад +31

    Go to ground.news/Sandboxx to stay fully informed on military developments around the world. Subscribe through my link right now for 40% off their Vantage Plan, which is what I use everyday.

    • @artkahn888
      @artkahn888 16 дней назад +1

      This is your best video yet good sir 🫡🇺🇸

    • @TheOriginalDeckBoy
      @TheOriginalDeckBoy 16 дней назад +1

      Hi Alex, love your work brother... One thing you didn't cover here was the fact that without a human in the seat the plane will be able to perform in G spectrums that are currently impossible with a pilot aboard... Tighter turns, crazy neg to pos turns and in doing so will gain a crazy advantage in a dog fight...

    • @beardoe6874
      @beardoe6874 16 дней назад

      Over the course of history, several advancements have accelerated the pace of technological developments. First it was primitive tools, then fire, then language, then agriculture, then government, then roads, then writing, then the bronze age, then the Iron age, then the firearm, then the printing press, then the industrial revolution, then the telegraph, then the light bulb, then the automobile, then the aeroplane, then the computer, then the atomic bomb, then the semiconductor, then the personal computer, then the internet, then social media, then LLM AI.
      With every innovation, the acceleration increases and now when the innovations are being made without the slowest piece of the puzzle which was the human inventor, why should we think that human estimates for a general AI timeline are accurate? We are now following Moore's law which is exponential growth and we might exceed that if AI gets better at training AI than humans. That should be pretty easy because AI never gets tired, AI never goes to sleep, AI never needs a bathroom break, etc. We will also use that exponential growth to constantly have more AIs training more AIs.
      If it hasn't happened already, pretty soon all we will be doing is guiding the training of AIs, building more AI computers and setting them up to train more AIs.
      It's only a question of when our innovation switches from social media speed to AI speed...

    • @nedkelly9688
      @nedkelly9688 16 дней назад

      Hahha you do not do military developments around the world on Sandboxx liar. Australia MQ28A Ghost Bat, Australia Hypersonixs scramjet powered hypersonic drones only 300 days until it's first flight. Australia AI drones. lot's you never mention.

    • @campsitez2355
      @campsitez2355 16 дней назад

      nothing will beat an AI fighter simply because whatever the AI fighter can do that a human can't do will determine that

  • @ivanthemadvandal8435
    @ivanthemadvandal8435 16 дней назад +322

    Naming an AI millitary program fuckin SkyBorg is the equivalent to naming an ocean liner The TitanicLusitania.

    • @bjkjoseph
      @bjkjoseph 16 дней назад +31

      We need to find Sarah Connor and protect her

    • @TomatoFettuccini
      @TomatoFettuccini 16 дней назад +17

      Or a car the FieroPinto.

    • @Daniele858585
      @Daniele858585 16 дней назад +3

      So the enemy it will be a fusion from terminator and star trek, coooool ahahahahha

    • @TheDutchGun
      @TheDutchGun 16 дней назад +29

      Nah, they knew exactly what they were doing here. Everyone currently in positions of influence today grew up with the Terminator movies and Star Trek: TNG. This is black humor at its finest, and I love it.

    • @Musix4me-Clarinet
      @Musix4me-Clarinet 16 дней назад +5

      Except one mimics fiction and the other historical events.

  • @jmorrison5206
    @jmorrison5206 16 дней назад +46

    DARPA sees “Terminator” as less of a warning, and more of a shopping list.

    • @admiralrng6506
      @admiralrng6506 16 дней назад

      so uhhh I want some of those T-800s, a couple of those T-1000s....

    • @skaterdude-ej6of
      @skaterdude-ej6of 10 дней назад

      Ai is not that dangerous don't take sci fi movies as an example

  • @nunessilva2162
    @nunessilva2162 16 дней назад +87

    "They don't get tired, they don't get scared, they're relentless..."
    It sends shivers down your spine...

    • @GrigoriZhukov
      @GrigoriZhukov 16 дней назад +4

      You realize that describes humans also.

    • @OtherTheDave
      @OtherTheDave 16 дней назад +6

      Eh, I’m sure there’s a kill switch somewhere. If nothing else, you can stop refueling them.

    • @jameson1239
      @jameson1239 16 дней назад +10

      @@GrigoriZhukovhumans very much do get tired

    • @ironoutrigger1
      @ironoutrigger1 16 дней назад +5

      You do realize they still run out of fuel, crew or no crew, right?

    • @jimandnena4
      @jimandnena4 16 дней назад +4

      @@OtherTheDave AI is already flying tankers. Check with the Navy.

  • @luckyno888
    @luckyno888 16 дней назад +151

    Imagine all those aircraft in the military aircraft boneyard being resurrected into Zombie Squadrons.

    • @DavidRobertson-pk4ld
      @DavidRobertson-pk4ld 16 дней назад +12

      Good idea…cheaper and more numerous in a shorter time period.

    • @MrSeanman30
      @MrSeanman30 16 дней назад +3

      Ive talked about it before but ive heard every fighter plane at leaat has a system where if a pilot goes rogue, the U.S givernment has a program where they can override the plane and contril it from somehwere else. Say a pilot is abiut to do anothwr 9/11 or somw shit. They can take the jet over and fly it back to base or wherever as if its an unmanned drone. Id inagine the same system would be in these as well

    • @coolcoolercoolest212
      @coolcoolercoolest212 16 дней назад +2

      Aaaiirplaaane braaaains!

    • @octonoozle
      @octonoozle 16 дней назад +6

      @@MrSeanman30 Yes they can log in to the rogue plane from the refueling port and inject sugar to ruin the jet.

    • @UnidentifiedAnomalouShart
      @UnidentifiedAnomalouShart 16 дней назад +1

      that would be more badass than having the surprise element of ufo tech

  • @shafty9147
    @shafty9147 16 дней назад +30

    When you consider just how much of a beast the F16 is in a dogfight, and how its main limiting factor is G force on the pilot, this is both awesome and terrifying.

    • @michaelpettersson4919
      @michaelpettersson4919 15 дней назад

      There are masses of F-16's around. Would it be cost effective to somehow lift out the cockpit and replace it with a computer and remote control system?

    • @Ilove3SGTE
      @Ilove3SGTE 14 дней назад

      The F16 is limited to 9g. People can for short durations handle up to 15g. The air frame itself will actually start to bend if you pull to many G's

    • @shafty9147
      @shafty9147 14 дней назад +1

      @@Ilove3SGTE agree, its rated to 9g, but a pilot can only sustain that for 20-30 seconds. An ai aircraft can stay in a 9 g turn for as long as they have airspeed

    • @Ilove3SGTE
      @Ilove3SGTE 14 дней назад +1

      @@shafty9147 true, but the aircraft can't put enough power into its air speed to sustain that kind of aoa anyway. In a rate fight you only hit 6 or 7 g's max. Too many and you're too slow and the other guy will get behind you.

    • @shafty9147
      @shafty9147 14 дней назад +1

      @@Ilove3SGTE this also would affect high speed maneuver though as well. As speed increases the G force needed to make the same maneuver increase as well, and pilots have to ramp up slowly to resist it. An AI could rapidly change direction while under G force, where as with a human they could break their neck/spine if they made a rapid shift from a right to left turn.

  • @evanmoore8578
    @evanmoore8578 16 дней назад +121

    "What happens if the Air Force's AI fighter jets GO ROGUE" - they run out of bombs, bullets, fuel, and become lawn darts.

    • @anthonydunn729
      @anthonydunn729 16 дней назад +19

      True but like, before that part...

    • @JohnGeorgeBauerBuis
      @JohnGeorgeBauerBuis 16 дней назад

      Yes.

    • @JohnGeorgeBauerBuis
      @JohnGeorgeBauerBuis 16 дней назад +3

      @@anthonydunn729also yes.

    • @gregniel
      @gregniel 15 дней назад +2

      That simply means a human has made a mistake somewhere.

    • @michaelpettersson4919
      @michaelpettersson4919 15 дней назад +4

      And probably gets remotely deactivated before that. There could even be a primitive homerun system installed that take over if the AI misbehave. Such systems are already standard in many drones. Loose control of the drone and it goes home on its own. A skilled operator do not program the home point at his feet. A jammed drone could be followed when returning home after all.

  • @Cryosxify
    @Cryosxify 16 дней назад +172

    Being able to sacrifice the air craft without having to sacrifice the pilot while also not having remote operated latency issues is gonna be nice

    • @billabonggolkpr
      @billabonggolkpr 16 дней назад +3

      Yep all a great idea right until it turns on you

    • @harrisonlichtenberg3162
      @harrisonlichtenberg3162 16 дней назад +23

      @@billabonggolkpr
      You know literally nothing about software design and AI, clearly.

    • @aw_dev
      @aw_dev 16 дней назад

      That's not how code works buddy​@@billabonggolkpr

    • @DUKE_of_RAMBLE
      @DUKE_of_RAMBLE 16 дней назад +12

      ​@@harrisonlichtenberg3162 It doesn't help that everyone still incorrectly calls it AI, instead of Machine Learning. Unfortunately, it doesn't help that even Alex has to call them AI just to maintain a narrative the average person can follow along with 😔
      Regardless, this guy probably didn't pay much attention to Alex in this video, _or his others_ on the subject... heh
      _(just looking at the other comments that display when you click his profile pic, kind of confirms my suspicion)_

    • @MrSeanman30
      @MrSeanman30 16 дней назад

      Ive talked about it before but ive heard every fighter plane at leaat has a system where if a pilot goes rogue, the U.S givernment has a program where they can override the plane and contril it from somehwere else. Say a pilot is about to do another 9/11 or some shit. They can take the jet over and fly it back to base or wherever as if its an unmanned drone. I imagine the same system would be in these as well

  • @user-nv3ue3rf4g
    @user-nv3ue3rf4g 16 дней назад +287

    An unmanned fighter will beat a crewed airframe every time. The performance envelope of the aircraft with a human in it fights at a huge maneuver disadvantage.

    • @ulfpe
      @ulfpe 16 дней назад +31

      Probably, but how much will dog fighting matter

    • @nihil8607
      @nihil8607 16 дней назад +33

      This hasn't been relevant for years now
      Even an unmanned fighter has way worse manueverability than a missile. Especially on an aircraft with high off boresight firing capability.

    • @pcread
      @pcread 16 дней назад +8

      Yeah, especially an elderly, overweight politician.

    • @edwinvermeulen8187
      @edwinvermeulen8187 16 дней назад +22

      If you look at identical designed planes, it doesn't matter much, most often the shear tresholds are below human tolerance levels. However, when not having to support human interface or bodies, the machines can become lighter, aerodynamicly different and thus exceed them. Those developments will suit the 6th and beyond generations the most.

    • @verdebusterAP
      @verdebusterAP 16 дней назад +2

      I would say 50/50 chances

  • @Lantalia
    @Lantalia 16 дней назад +13

    The greatest benefit of AI combat piloting is _not_ having a squishy human experiencing the flight, not only so they aren't exposed to danger, but also so the fighter doesn't need the cockpit, ejections seats, etc, and so that the air frame can make maneuvers that exceed the g limits of humans

    • @ET-vj4vz
      @ET-vj4vz 11 дней назад

      👈It's actually the airframes that have the limits, just saying...

  • @jamesburnett7085
    @jamesburnett7085 16 дней назад +18

    Alex Hollings" skill as a writer should never be overlooked, nor taken for granted. When program content is highly technical, such as is common on this channel, it might be easy to focus so much on the tech that we fail to notice that the language is not only precise, but also artistic. What Mr. Hollings has to say can be said in a lot of different ways, and I love his choices - it is a journalistic style that really works for me. Judging by the awards he has received, it must be working for a lot of people.

  • @greater_ape
    @greater_ape 16 дней назад +8

    Am a PhD candidate in an AI-aligned area. This video gave a very good explanation of the current state of AI agents and technologies. You have my approval.

    • @pike100
      @pike100 15 дней назад

      FYI, Alex doesn't need your approval. 😉

    • @greater_ape
      @greater_ape 15 дней назад

      @@pike100 ok

  • @Madwand99
    @Madwand99 16 дней назад +93

    As an AI researcher: thank you for creating such an excellent explanation of AI. Too many people think AI means "Skynet" or something similar instead of realizing we've had AI for decades. It's an incredibly broad term.

    • @NSGrendel
      @NSGrendel 16 дней назад +4

      We don't have AI. We had advanced categorization and similar psuedo-clever systems. Then we had intelligent systems. We are getting close to pseudo-intelligent autonomous systems that can be marketed. I'm sure that going forwards, major contractors will prioritize safety over profit gleaned from using intelligent systems. Oh, wait. Boeing.
      As a commercial analyst who worked on the voice-recognition systems that now monitor you, I can assure you, your failure to appreciate the implementation of technology is just as frightening as drones. Self-generative AI systems are about 15 years away at most.

    • @sittinandthinkin
      @sittinandthinkin 16 дней назад +2

      30 years ago at a class reunion one woman told me her husband worked in AI. I vaguely understood it then.

    • @Madwand99
      @Madwand99 16 дней назад +8

      ​@@NSGrendel Have you watched the video? It appears not. This is exactly the kind of ignorance I see all the time "We don't have AI" lol. What have I spent the last 20 years working on then? AI, that's what!

    • @rungfang27
      @rungfang27 16 дней назад +3

      Well since this is youtube, we have no idea what you do in life. You could be a sandwich artist for all we know. AI could be bad, it just takes a few bad key strokes, or it deciding one day humans are bad. There is good and bad with everything and fear with something new its always going to be that way. I'm still pissed NASA put our location on a golden record for our future alien overlords to find!

    • @Madwand99
      @Madwand99 16 дней назад +7

      @@rungfang27 I have a PhD in machine learning. It's fine if you don't believe me, all I'm saying is that Sandboxx did a good job with this video. This is me clapping. As for AI being "bad"... well, all software can have bugs and so potentially malfunction, but it can't "go rogue" in the way people think from movies. It just doesn't work that way. The video covered this pretty well, watch it again for the details. Maybe in a few decades rogue AI will be possible, we'll see. Nothing to worry about for now.

  • @pcread
    @pcread 16 дней назад +33

    Individual narrow AIs have their limitations, but we are in the era of teams of agents. Like a band playing individual instruments together. Or one AI to find a restaurant you like, another to plot a route and another to drive the car there. Each of which already exist.

    • @neurofiedyamato8763
      @neurofiedyamato8763 16 дней назад

      They can't coordinate on their own. You need a separate AI or algorithm to order individual narrow AIs. Besides that, for it to go rogue, the coordinating AI still need to have at least general intelligence to break out of its confines. Otherwise it doesn't even have the concept of attacking humans.

    • @jackthompson6296
      @jackthompson6296 16 дней назад

      The one AI to rule them all is both far away and not that far away.

  • @JohnHoranzy
    @JohnHoranzy 16 дней назад +9

    Extracting statistical patterns from large data sets. Thank you Allison Gopnick for that precise definition.

    • @nedames3328
      @nedames3328 14 дней назад

      Agreed. How is that different from how our brains work?

  • @thefoolishhiker3103
    @thefoolishhiker3103 16 дней назад +19

    You did an excellent job describing the various types of AI. As a software developer I get annoyed by the leap to these models being self aware simply because they have become great at taking enormous amounts of data and spitting out a human like response through statistical trickery.
    The danger with this technology in military applications is not that it becomes self aware and goes rouge. It is making sure it is shooting down the right target which means having the appropriate level of human interaction with the weapon system.

    • @nedkelly9688
      @nedkelly9688 16 дней назад +1

      Australia is at the forefront of AI drones, few systems are in Ukraine war now being used.
      Australia MQ28A Ghost Bat is still at the forefront of combat drones and it uses a human as a custodian of it to make sure it does not hit a wrong target. have to wonder how good USA AI is if they are still relying on human pilots inside their versions like this F16. Ghost Bat has no joysticks or any way a human can physically fly it. AI does it all and only input a command by a human.. Turkey Khizelman still has joysticks like a reaper drone too..

    • @TS-bj8my
      @TS-bj8my 15 дней назад

      ​@@nedkelly9688 The US is NOT relying on human pilots inside their drones. Get Real! This is a prototype F16 converted to fly with AI and it has flow without people onboard. I've seen videos of it dog fighting with a Gopro as a pilot strapped to the head rest!

    • @i-love-space390
      @i-love-space390 14 дней назад +1

      @@nedkelly9688 Let us hope the Russians don't capture any and send the software to China to be reverse engineered.

  • @Istandby666
    @Istandby666 16 дней назад +7

    For anyone who doesn't understand the difference between a fighting falcon and a viper.
    Viper is used by the mechanics and the people who work on these F-16's. The handle viper is not official. In fact, if you go on a military or government webpage. Both the military and the government still call the F-16, the fighting falcon.

    • @doujinflip
      @doujinflip 15 дней назад

      It’s the same with the A-10 “Warthog” Thunderbolt II

  • @itsallgoodaversa
    @itsallgoodaversa 16 дней назад +6

    “Clout goblin” is some great writing.

  • @riotintheair
    @riotintheair 16 дней назад +7

    This is something I'd expect machine learning to be pretty good at. One thing military aircraft have in spades is excellent sensing equipment and the sky is an unconflicted space - even the busiest airspace is a very clean environment. All of this means there's a lot of good data in, and a lot of training data for the model. It's all a recipe for success. I have almost 15 years experience in macine learning to build statistical models and predict narrow outcomes and I'm pretty skeptical of most things described as AI, but I think the military use for aircraft piloting is a pretty well defined problem - maybe even the best possible problem because of how good the sensing suite is on military aircraft.

    • @Bill_the_curious
      @Bill_the_curious 16 дней назад

      I must agree with you, as a computer programmer. I don't use LISP or whatever, but I have background in voice software and other 'stuff'. I would love to learn more about the DARPA sensor interfacing with pilots. Such a huge leap from the old days !

    • @nedkelly9688
      @nedkelly9688 16 дней назад

      Australia MQ28A Ghost Bat been flying years now in airspace lol and it's main purpose is sensors for military applications, unlike this F16 it uses no human to pilot it ever, no joysticks no cockpit. all programmes and all commands keyed in to control it by programme...

  • @NonsenseFabricator
    @NonsenseFabricator 16 дней назад +5

    23:10 - Thank you. We focus too much on AI going haywire and not enough on it functioning with terrifying perfection.

  • @goldenageofdinosaurs7192
    @goldenageofdinosaurs7192 16 дней назад +5

    Thank you for bringing a modicum of reason to the AI discussion, Alex. It’s nice to see someone making videos on the platform who is not just running on conditioning, emotion & what they think will generate clicks.

  • @shannonkohl68
    @shannonkohl68 16 дней назад +12

    ~"We have less to fear from rouge AI than we do from AI functioning as intended". Alex knocked that closing statement out of the park.

    • @pike100
      @pike100 15 дней назад +1

      *rogue is the correct spelling

  • @imghoti
    @imghoti 16 дней назад +7

    "MEATBOX" - Instant Classic!

  • @tenchraven
    @tenchraven 16 дней назад +14

    As a computer engineer, trust me, nothing that fits in a Viper's cockpit is going to have a singularity, the DeCartes moment of "I think therefore I am, I think". If it does anything really fun, it's going to glitch, then turn into a glider. They'll be find for wild weasel work, and escorts in a fairly permissive environment. Probably not doing CAS.

    • @pogo1140
      @pogo1140 16 дней назад

      So they will be like the Cylon raiders

    • @Danlovestrivium
      @Danlovestrivium 16 дней назад +3

      F-16 Avionics Specialist here.
      With as often as these fighter aircraft have avionic malfunctions, this tech is going to be very limited in it's role for a very, very long time and quite possible only after the software is installed on a completely bespoke platform completely designed to be a human-less aircraft since the drawing board.

  • @chijimmy1
    @chijimmy1 16 дней назад +5

    I always come away smarter after watching your videos. You do a great job at explaining difficult topics such as AI. Just keep the videos coming I always look forward to them.

  • @RaulV22
    @RaulV22 16 дней назад +3

    Alex, I would love to see you interview Annie Jacobsen. Or maybe even do like a monthly or quarterly series on DARPA. Love your work!

  • @jimmarburger611
    @jimmarburger611 16 дней назад +6

    Another excellent video Alex. You are the best by far.

  • @Firechief100
    @Firechief100 16 дней назад +5

    Wow!!! Way to put things into perspective. Great work.

  • @NSWvet83
    @NSWvet83 16 дней назад +3

    You're wrong about the flight hrs per year. It's at least 49hrs a month that is required to stay mission ready. I racked up 1000hrs within 3yrs. It was war time. After 2500hrs pilots usually are high enough ranked, they end up running squadrons and don't stay mission ready 100% of the time, or are in an admin role.

  • @terryvalentine369
    @terryvalentine369 16 дней назад +3

    It’s not the current AI that concerns me. It’s when the military gets where it’s headed. That We need to think about our final arrangements for.

  • @centralaveauto
    @centralaveauto 16 дней назад +4

    How about the 75 year old jumping in the viper! That's Cool

  • @l.r.norris6519
    @l.r.norris6519 14 дней назад

    Good videp-! Answered a lot of questions about AI and Military sytems

  • @texasranger24
    @texasranger24 16 дней назад +9

    A video about the X65 and active flow control would be cool.

  • @a13Banger
    @a13Banger 16 дней назад +8

    I've said it before and I'll say it again. Damn, I love this channel!! :)

  • @Elias_Ainsworth92
    @Elias_Ainsworth92 16 дней назад +3

    While the overall conclusions to this video are fine, there is some significant simplification in the definitions of AI. The line between 'narrow AI' and 'General AI' isn't a strict barrier but a wide fuzzy mess. AIs trained for coding can already write in coding languages and frameworks they have never seen just based on api documentation which is a small expansion of context, but we don't consider these AIs to be general AIs because amount they can expand their context is very limited.

  • @markymarknj
    @markymarknj 16 дней назад +1

    Thanks for a very INFORMATIVE video!

  • @B-leafer
    @B-leafer 16 дней назад +1

    Outstanding discussion Alex.
    Ty

  • @erasmus_locke
    @erasmus_locke 16 дней назад +5

    Remotely triggered thermite charge on the motherboard should stop this from being a problem

    • @doujinflip
      @doujinflip 15 дней назад

      I’d think in the case of what a human pilot would eject for in combat, an AI would instead self-destruct its own vital components to prevent reconstruction by the enemy.

  • @user-ym2ve7be8l
    @user-ym2ve7be8l 16 дней назад +3

    Good explanation of "real life" accrual of flight time (experience) vs. programmed AI "experience" available immediately. Gonna suck giving up combat flying to the machines but you understand why.

  • @troyallan8683
    @troyallan8683 16 дней назад +2

    Goodness you provide the best content on the net. Well done.

  • @centralaveauto
    @centralaveauto 16 дней назад

    Thanks for the great work Alex I look forward to your stuff every week. Where did you get that picture behind you? It's amazing.

  • @JSFGuy
    @JSFGuy 16 дней назад +8

    I am north of Edwards AFB I get to see this X-62 when it's out my way.

    • @dextermorgan1
      @dextermorgan1 16 дней назад +1

      Very cool! So, what else have you seen? 😉

    • @JSFGuy
      @JSFGuy 16 дней назад +1

      @@dextermorgan1 two weeks ago the Raider was out daytime flights, I did see it at night several years ago because the stars were twinkling consistent with the profile. I can't post photos here but nobody else said anything about it, it was just up there it was probably about 25k with a Falcon chase. I have a camera with a telephoto.

  • @Delta5x7
    @Delta5x7 16 дней назад +20

    I'd like to see the rogue AI try to do anything when they've spent their munitions and run out of fuel

    • @snapdragon6601
      @snapdragon6601 16 дней назад +4

      They just send a signal to the AI powered tanker plane to meet up. It's still gonna have trouble getting more munitions though. 😄

    • @lanzer22
      @lanzer22 16 дней назад

      AI can easily take these issues into consideration. For example, take less risk if ammo is low, etc.

    • @shionuzuki5549
      @shionuzuki5549 16 дней назад +1

      It will pull up into a hangar that's run by robots , guided in by an automated control tower, with ammunition manufactured by an automated factory.

    • @trevor21241842
      @trevor21241842 16 дней назад +1

      The f35b could just slow to a vtol and have drone deliver a munitions box and load it. There are options even right now to successfully do it

    • @granatmof
      @granatmof 16 дней назад

      It will be like Iron Eagle and instead of kids, it's AI systems coordinating the various missions.
      There's still no way to reload midair though. But Launching missile trucks and sharing target data is also the future.

  • @TheDaveRout
    @TheDaveRout 15 дней назад

    Excellent video, really well covered. Your one of the best content creators on RUclips

  • @bakkerem1967
    @bakkerem1967 15 дней назад

    Thanks Alex, that again was a very informative issue !

  • @knightofavalon86
    @knightofavalon86 16 дней назад +3

    So it seems like my least favorite thing about Ace combat 7 (The way it spammed drone dog fights) was actually prescient and I'm mad about it

  • @scothayes9220
    @scothayes9220 16 дней назад +9

    Thanks for the description of the various types of AI. I had no idea.

  • @brucemiller3012
    @brucemiller3012 16 дней назад

    Amazing report. Another home run from Alex. You are truly unique and incredible

  • @rockfordfiles5451
    @rockfordfiles5451 16 дней назад +2

    I see your point. Perfectly presented, thanks

  • @dextermorgan1
    @dextermorgan1 16 дней назад +3

    Where is the video from yesterday? It was about the B21 Raider. I saw the notification but by the time I wanted to watch it, it was gone. Am I missing something?

  • @mr.normalguy69
    @mr.normalguy69 16 дней назад +14

    Reminds me of the movie 'Stealth' where the AI pilot goes rouge and causes a lot of havoc.

    • @lillyanneserrelio2187
      @lillyanneserrelio2187 16 дней назад +3

      Not even those 5 unnecessary seconds of Jessica Biel in a bathing suit could save that movie

    • @aw_dev
      @aw_dev 16 дней назад

      *rogue 😂😂😂
      No hard feelings haha

    • @Bill_the_curious
      @Bill_the_curious 16 дней назад

      Jessica Biel ! I only saw the cover art. Now I need to see the movie!

  • @alecsenior
    @alecsenior 16 дней назад +1

    Amazing as always

  • @briangriffiths114
    @briangriffiths114 15 дней назад

    That was beyond interesting. Great video, yet again.

  • @kameronjones7139
    @kameronjones7139 16 дней назад +19

    The fact you can put what is basically a very experienced pilot in an aircraft without training or risking a human pilot is crazy. I can't wait for them to train them in sead and bvr it will be a massive a headache for anyone once they get everything polished

    • @Cryosxify
      @Cryosxify 16 дней назад

      But on the flip side enemy nations like CCP china don't have the experience/training disadvantage anymore and would just need to field lots of ai combat aircraft

    • @kameronjones7139
      @kameronjones7139 16 дней назад +2

      @@Cryosxify I don't think they have anything like this. I mean we hear claims of them being ahead in Ai but they haven't demonstrated anything like this and they would definitely be bragging about it if they could

    • @supremecaffeine2633
      @supremecaffeine2633 16 дней назад

      ​@@Cryosxify The CCP's AI can't even speak their own language correctly. I doubt they have the tech or knowledge to replicate this effectively.

    • @billabonggolkpr
      @billabonggolkpr 16 дней назад

      Yep including us when this shite inevitably goes horribly wrong.

    • @kameronjones7139
      @kameronjones7139 16 дней назад

      @billabonggolkpr so long as you set the parameters to not hit friendly it will be fine

  • @user-rd2wj9lr8j
    @user-rd2wj9lr8j 16 дней назад +3

    OMG can we stop naming these things after derivatives of skynet, please! 😅

  • @carlicahn3901
    @carlicahn3901 16 дней назад +2

    I wish you flew with major Jack trombetta. Top of his top gun class. He used to take out the f-16’s when they got new gear. Truly amazing pilot and person.

  • @phylismaddox4880
    @phylismaddox4880 16 дней назад +2

    I love how you can unironically say things like 'run of the mill F16 pilots'. Must be some mill!
    Thanks for the great videos! .

  • @h-e-acc
    @h-e-acc 16 дней назад +8

    Me: Hey JJ, can you come up with a cool title for the US Air Force program that uses AI for its jet fighters?
    ChatGPT: Sure thing! How about "Operation SkySentinel: AI-Enhanced Air Dominance"?
    Me: Give me at least 10 more please.
    ChatGPT: Absolutely! Here are ten more titles for the US Air Force program using AI for its jet fighters:
    1. “Project WingGuard: AI-Driven Aerial Superiority”
    2. “SkyGuardian Initiative: AI in Combat Aviation”
    3. “Operation FalconEye: Intelligent Flight Command”
    4. “EagleVision Program: AI-Powered Air Defense”
    5. “Phoenix Shield: Advanced AI Air Tactics”
    6. “SentinelStrike: AI-Enhanced Aerial Warfare”
    7. “Operation SkyNet: Autonomous Fighter Command”
    8. “Valkyrie Vision: AI-Driven Combat Precision”
    9. “FalconForce Initiative: AI Combat Integration”
    10. “Operation Thunderhawk: AI-Enhanced Flight Operations”

  • @WhittleMiiSimpler
    @WhittleMiiSimpler 16 дней назад +4

    Even if you are correct, and these systems never develop their own sentience, they are still a horrifying dystopian nightmare. An imperial and increasingly authoritarian USA will need fewer and fewer loyal soldiers to fight their battles for them as AI "wingmen" take the field. Not needing individual soldier loyalty means an ever decreasing need to listen to the People or pretend to hold elites accountable. What happens to the People under a government that can completely abandon the pretense of accountability through AI systems-based force multiplication?

    • @Bill_the_curious
      @Bill_the_curious 16 дней назад

      "a government that can completely abandon the pretense of accountability" is what we just got past. It's the culture that matters, even more than the weapons. I believe the culture would become less insane if the politicians had to be in the battles they send us to fight .

  • @melvinmprasad6117
    @melvinmprasad6117 15 дней назад

    By the way keep up the good work guys I love your channel. 👍

  • @skaterdude-ej6of
    @skaterdude-ej6of 10 дней назад +1

    Thank you for your videos

  • @crisop-jm8cz
    @crisop-jm8cz 16 дней назад +5

    "What happens if the Air Force's AI fighter jets go rogue." Two words: Jaime foxx.

  • @h-e-acc
    @h-e-acc 16 дней назад +13

    "Eaglenet" is a strong choice! Here are some variations on "Eaglenet":
    1. "Eaglenet Command: AI-Enhanced Air Operations"
    2. "Eaglenet Initiative: Intelligent Combat Aviation"
    3. "Eaglenet Sentinel: Advanced AI Air Defense"
    4. "Eaglenet Force: Autonomous Flight Strategies"
    5. "Eaglenet Vanguard: AI-Driven Aerial Superiority"
    6. "Eaglenet Guardian: Intelligent Fighter Tactics"
    7. "Eaglenet Horizon: Next-Gen AI Air Integration"
    8. "Eaglenet Shield: Advanced Aerial Command"
    9. "Eaglenet Strike: AI-Powered Combat Precision"
    10. "Eaglenet Ascend: Cutting-Edge AI Flight Control"

  • @lagoonlane
    @lagoonlane 15 дней назад

    Great information!

  • @davidsimmons280
    @davidsimmons280 16 дней назад +1

    Thank you for this video, best explanation of A.I. I have seen.

  • @MattttG3
    @MattttG3 16 дней назад +27

    *we aren’t “decades away from AGI” ; we are decades away from being told that we are using AGI* with our highest defense lines.

    • @MattttG3
      @MattttG3 16 дней назад +2

      It wouldn’t be just Top Secret but compartmentalized access program. No doubt

    • @33moneyball
      @33moneyball 16 дней назад

      They won’t be able to hide it unless it’s deployment is very limited. You can hide a couple “SR72” type recon platforms…you can’t hide hundreds or thousands of fighters sans pilots. I agree it will be used before we’re told but it’ll be like one B21 operated by the CIA.

    • @DjHazardous
      @DjHazardous 16 дней назад

      *Rumor has OpenAI already did achieved AGI but with a black project which apparently could shut down our economy and that's why it won't be released there a channel that covers this very good if interested it's called "AI Search" it's has a Brain with cables pfp have fun* 👋🐴

    • @tfkia356
      @tfkia356 16 дней назад +6

      Were decades from anyone being able to *define* AGI, let alone make one.

    • @granatmof
      @granatmof 16 дней назад

      Now you're just going to say presidents after Reagan were replaced with Cyborgs.

  • @warpdriveby
    @warpdriveby 16 дней назад +6

    Without the need to protect a 100kg sack of jelly, aircraft materials can be pushed FAR further even to failure and all we'd lose is gear. With modern solid state systems, the G loads that would kill a human are irrelevant.

    • @XJapa1n09
      @XJapa1n09 5 дней назад

      You overestimate the mechanical strength of aircraft a lot in this. Aircraft aren’t invincible, believe it or not. Even at the “minor” load limits a human imposes aircraft still take a beating and require tons of maintenance hours to keep flight worthy. Any push into loads higher than humans can handle will reduce combat worthy airframe hours exponentially. Trust me, I fixed fighters for 20 years.

  • @XBOXTimeDevil
    @XBOXTimeDevil 16 дней назад

    Great video!

  • @marksanney2088
    @marksanney2088 16 дней назад

    Thank you, my friend. Always enjoy your objective and well researched vlogs! 👍🏻🇺🇸🦅🇺🇸👍🏻
    Have a fantastic weekend.

  • @lucasokeefe7935
    @lucasokeefe7935 16 дней назад +4

    "Biological meat bots" and "clout goblins" are my favorite phrases for at least the next few hours.

  • @Peter_Morris
    @Peter_Morris 16 дней назад +3

    For me the real horror of Ace Combat 7’s story wasn’t the rogue AI or even JPEG Dog. It was the idea that war became more common because drones were involved. Human pilots weren’t being lost so it was seen as justifiable to use drones for all kinds of warfare. This led to massive infrastructure destruction.
    And we’re already starting to see that in conflicts all around the globe. AI will only make that worse.

  • @everettputerbaugh3996
    @everettputerbaugh3996 16 дней назад +2

    40 years ago, we called this tech. "expert systems" and they weren't much better than a new technician at locating (diagnosing) the fault in a T.V. set. It seems to have improved somewhat.

  • @MichaelNichols-ec9pt
    @MichaelNichols-ec9pt 16 дней назад +2

    It took me 12 years to attain 2000 hours of flight time. Other than schools, I did nothing else but fly for that time.

  • @guystucker4738
    @guystucker4738 16 дней назад +7

    The AI F16 would have done MUCH better if it did t have a 76 year old man in the cockpit. Could it pull more than 3-4g with him in there?

    • @abdiganiaden
      @abdiganiaden 16 дней назад

      The plane does not need to turn that hard anyway
      This isn’t Vietnam era
      It’s most gradual turn where AI will know minutes ahead where to be, it’s not just going to be like oh crap must turn now

    • @granatmof
      @granatmof 16 дней назад

      I mean arguably military testing is always about examining mission and condition limitations, not optimal performance. Battlefields rarely let you perform optimally. It's why there's an A10 with a simulated F22 kill.

  • @cgg4583
    @cgg4583 16 дней назад

    Excellent description of the practical (realistic) application of Ai

  • @Tackleberry117
    @Tackleberry117 16 дней назад +2

    It can't be bargained with, it can't be reasoned with, it doesn't feel pity or remorse or fear, and it absolutely will not stop...

    • @pike100
      @pike100 15 дней назад

      That's a great line in a science fiction movie. It has nothing to do with reality.

  • @danstewart3894
    @danstewart3894 16 дней назад

    I cannot wait until your next video drops, every time.

  • @susanbane2747
    @susanbane2747 13 дней назад

    Excellent update on AI
    Thanks 👍

  • @ilkoderez601
    @ilkoderez601 16 дней назад

    Those animations at the end of the video were pimpin! That convoy with the laser stryker!

  • @johnfaircloth70
    @johnfaircloth70 16 дней назад +1

    Wow, Alex ,that was one of the clearest, most elementary, and detailed explanations of AI ,I've heard yet ,great job ,great channel ,John.f

  • @robertbozentka1698
    @robertbozentka1698 12 дней назад

    Thanks for your common sense info on this complex topic

  • @samhamilton69014
    @samhamilton69014 16 дней назад +1

    Brilliant Alex! Military tech is always the tip of the spear, so its not surprising you've put out the best, and most grounded, explanation on AI this novice has seen! Thanks so much! 😊👏

  • @JoelBrage
    @JoelBrage 15 дней назад

    Wow best AI explanation is found on a military aviation channel. Well done!👍

  • @jamesrizza2640
    @jamesrizza2640 15 дней назад +1

    What's scary is that your run of the mill F16 pilot is among the best in the world, if not the best.

  • @Igotplex1
    @Igotplex1 16 дней назад

    I love the music in the beginning

  • @animusadvertere3371
    @animusadvertere3371 16 дней назад +1

    AIs can be great tools. Just like previous improvements in automation. They do require careful safeguards, also like previous automation.

  • @ARGONUAT
    @ARGONUAT 12 дней назад +1

    I suspect you are right on about the AI aspects. It is the human tendency to want to rationalize and/or avoid the implications of the concept of “evil” that concerns me. Pogo said “We have met the enemy and he is us”, but I’m talking way more metaphysically. Pride goes before destruction, and a haughty spirit before a fall…

  • @joebago1679
    @joebago1679 16 дней назад

    Good stuff.

  • @zlm001
    @zlm001 16 дней назад

    Thanks

  • @carlobinda1127
    @carlobinda1127 16 дней назад +1

    Most people will never understand the scope and magnitude of this program. It's insane to see how far we've gone with technology. 😲👏

  • @charlesblithfield6182
    @charlesblithfield6182 16 дней назад

    AIs are just super sophisticated statistical correlation regression/extrapolation models. The trick is hardware and software that allow ridiculous numbers of these correlations to be made (“learning”) so that advanced “behaviours” are created. They are so complex that the designers may completely understand the data they learn from and the ways the models address the data but the “graph” of how the data is integrated can be a black box, an unknown. This is one reason “alignment” of the model is so important so it’s “rewarded” for doing things that don’t cause harm.

  • @petergreaves2914
    @petergreaves2914 16 дней назад +1

    Cool to see that the Aussies are not ,eft out, with the inclusion of B-roll for the Ghost Bat & renders of RAAF F18’s

  • @baileyburnsed4352
    @baileyburnsed4352 16 дней назад +2

    I am a software engineer, AI can't code for crap, I think soilders are safe for now

  • @CraigGood
    @CraigGood 16 дней назад

    Very nice summary of what AI is and is not.

  • @brianbates9425
    @brianbates9425 16 дней назад

    The best summary of what AI is, and more importantly what it isn’t. Thank you for your practical insights, and highly informed perspective.

  • @tomdave42
    @tomdave42 16 дней назад +1

    This is pretty f****** impressive

  • @timtitus5002
    @timtitus5002 16 дней назад

    Assuming that the Vista was using thrust vectoring the Vista had a big advantage.

  • @tempcb
    @tempcb 16 дней назад

    they put on a show at the air show last weekend, down here in pcb

  • @danielbradmacboleniii5601
    @danielbradmacboleniii5601 16 дней назад +1

    Greetings from Apacheria in the Arizona Territories Ahe'hye'e

  • @Shadow2e12
    @Shadow2e12 16 дней назад

    Just saw the movie stealth from 2005 and it covers the topic. Cool movie too