Archive for the ‘surveillance’ category: Page 34
Oct 1, 2016
HBO’s Westworld Creators Talk AI, Sentience, And Surveillance
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: entertainment, robotics/AI, surveillance
Lisa Joy and Jonah Nolan explore dark sides of AI and humanity in series that reboots the 1973 film about a robotic theme park gone haywire.
Sep 20, 2016
Fighter engine-size hypersonic ground demonstrator construction plans moving ahead
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: military, space, surveillance
SABRE is at heart a rocket engine designed to power aircraft directly into space (single-stage to orbit) to allow reliable, responsive and cost effective space access, and in a different configuration to allow aircraft to cruise at high speeds (five times the speed of sound) within the atmosphere.
If the rocket for space is not used then the US air force could use Skylon and SABRE engine technology to develop a 4000 mph hypersonic fighter plane or spy plane.
Sep 5, 2016
Artificial intelligence wants to be your bro, not your foe
Posted by Elmar Arunov in categories: computing, economics, education, employment, policy, robotics/AI, surveillance, transportation
The odds that artificial intelligence will enslave or eliminate humankind within the next decade or so are thankfully slim. So concludes a major report from Stanford University on the social and economic implications of artificial intelligence.
At the same time, however, the report concludes that AI looks certain to upend huge aspects of everyday life, from employment and education to transportation and entertainment. More than 20 leaders in the fields of AI, computer science, and robotics coauthored the report. The analysis is significant because the public alarm over the impact of AI threatens to shape public policy and corporate decisions.
It predicts that automated trucks, flying vehicles, and personal robots will be commonplace by 2030, but cautions that remaining technical obstacles will limit such technologies to certain niches. It also warns that the social and ethical implications of advances in AI, such as the potential for unemployment in certain areas and likely erosions of privacy driven by new forms of surveillance and data mining, will need to be open to discussion and debate.
Continue reading “Artificial intelligence wants to be your bro, not your foe” »
Jul 30, 2016
US surveillance plane makes emergency landing in Russia
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: geopolitics, military, surveillance, treaties
We always hear how bad Russia is; etc. We never hear about these stories where they helped the US.
A U.S. Air Force surveillance plane making a routine flight over Russia to fulfill a treaty obligation was forced to make an emergency landing in eastern Russia earlier this week after experiencing a problem with its landing gear, a Pentagon spokes person told Fox News.
The unarmed American military plane had Russian officials on board as part of the 1992 Open Skies Treaty, which bounds 34 nations, including Russia and the United States, to allow military inspection flights to ensure compliance to long standing arms-control treaties and to offer greater transparency into each nation’s military capabilities.
Continue reading “US surveillance plane makes emergency landing in Russia” »
Jul 15, 2016
Drone disguised as a BIRD discovered in Somalia — is it a surveillance tactic?
Posted by Dan Kummer in categories: drones, surveillance
The drone crashed in Mogadishu’s Waabari district this week where it was found and pictured on social media.
Jul 6, 2016
NSA to stand trial for spying on convicted bomber without warrant
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: government, internet, mobile phones, privacy, security, surveillance
You got to luv this one.
The security agency must defend itself in a US appeals court for violating the rights of a convicted bomber by supposedly illegally spying on him.
A US appeals court will weigh a constitutional challenge on Wednesday to a warrantless government surveillance program, brought by an Oregon man found guilty of attempting to detonate a bomb in 2010 during a Christmas tree-lighting ceremony.
Continue reading “NSA to stand trial for spying on convicted bomber without warrant” »
Jul 2, 2016
DARPA unified space-sensor networks help keep orbiting junk from slamming into something important
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: military, satellites, surveillance
Now, here is a longer term concept. Could we see a day soon where we have some model of an EPA in Space due to the already junk material (namely abandoned/ broken satellites, etc.) and mining? Wonder who will get the contracts for space cleanup?
DARPA recently said that it had finished integrating seven space-watching networks that will feed tons of new Earth-orbiting junk data into what the agency calls “the largest and most diverse network of space situational awareness networks ever assembled.”
+More on Network World: NASA’s hot Juno Jupiter mission +
Jun 30, 2016
DARPA Completes Integration of Live Data Feeds Into Space Surveillance Network; Jeremy Raley Comments
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: information science, military, robotics/AI, satellites, surveillance
The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency has finished its work to integrate live data feeds from several sources into the U.S. Space Surveillance Network run by the Air Force in an effort to help space monitoring teams check when satellites are at risk.
SSN is a global network of 29 military radar and optical telescopes and DARPA added seven space data providers to the network to help monitor the space environment under its OrbitOutlook program, the agency said Wednesday.
DARPA plans to test the automated algorithms developed to determine relevant data from the integrated feed in order to help SSA experts carry out their mission.
Jun 25, 2016
CYBERWAR (Trailer)
Posted by Sean Brazell in categories: cybercrime/malcode, government, military, surveillance
Looks to be quite fascinating…
But is anyone else annoyed by the never ending use of the word “cyber”?