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The Military United States Technology

Boeing's Autonomous Fighter Jet Could Arrive Next Year (engadget.com) 130

Slashdot reader technology_dude writes in response to an Engadget report about Boeing's plans to develop an autonomous fighter jet: In Season 1, Episode 23 of Star Trek, the Enterprise visits two worlds that are at continuous war. The war is ran via computers, and people that are victims in a "hit" report to a facility to be terminated. Kirk tells the world's leaders that there can be no peace if there is no cost to the war. We avoid war because of its cost and ugliness. Remove that and you remove the reason to stop. It looks like we may need the Captain to intervene here on planet earth. We seem hellbent on automating our militaries. The report says Boeing's recently unveiled autonomous fighter jet, called the Boeing Airpower Teaming System, is expected to arrive as soon as 2020. "The aircraft is designed to fly alongside crewed jets during combat, performing early warning tests, intelligence gathering, surveillance and reconnaissance," reports Engadget. The company says the jets will cost a "fraction" of a manned fighter.
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Boeing's Autonomous Fighter Jet Could Arrive Next Year

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  • SkyNet (Score:4, Insightful)

    by macraig ( 621737 ) <mark.a.craig@gmail . c om> on Wednesday February 27, 2019 @06:36PM (#58191236)

    So SkyNet's air force arrives before SkyNet proper....

  • Call them what they are KILLER ROBOTS!

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Bite my shinny metal ass.

    • by tsqr ( 808554 )

      Call them what they are KILLER ROBOTS!

      Please explain how "performing early warning tests, intelligence gathering, surveillance and reconnaissance" qualifies them as KILLER ROBOTS.

    • Call them what they are KILLER ROBOTS!

      Are you trying to make them sound worse or incredibly much cooler?

    • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

      Australian killer robots if you don't mind, still as long as it costs a fraction of the F35 Flying Pig, a sound investment. Although fitting extra gear a waste of money, should just be more a boomerang style drone, if it find a target it rams it and blows up, if it doesn't it returns, if it finds a target and misses, well, try, try, try again.

      As an interceptor, you just want it out their fast and kill the psychopath in the enemy fighter, so killer robot or killer human, which is worse in reality. I got to

      • 1-Russia, China, and North Korea spend a lot of time and money on "Hacking" western computer systems. Taking remote control of these jets seems like it would be a high priority target for them. 2-Replacing all our manned jets with robot fighters would allow America to destroy its enemies without any "Human" cost. Add robot ground soldiers and they can invade anyone, at any time, for as long as desired. How long would the Vietnam war have lasted without the draft and casualties? 3-No casualty wars means
      • by BranMan ( 29917 )

        Just keep in mind that 7/2 is also a fraction.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Highway to the...... Auto-Zone

  • In Season 1, Episode 23 of Star Trek, the Enterprise visits two worlds that are at continuous war. The war is ran via computers, and people that are victims in a "hit" report to a facility to be terminated.

    That's not how it would ever work. One side would eventually cheat, commit the people who didn't suicide to war, and win.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      The only less realistic sci-fi trope is inventing indefinite life extension tech, and "wise leaders don't let anybody use it becuz 2 many peepul" and the voting pop is fine with that.

      • by mentil ( 1748130 )

        The ONLY less-realistic scifi trope? Not FTL travel? Or time travel? Or reversing X's polarity? Or aliens that look and function mostly like humans, have mostly-American culture, and speak English? Or there being a colony of billions of humans on other planets? Or the moon/Earth having rockets strapped to it to blast it around space like a starship? Or people being a-ok with the ethical implications of transporters? Or the mighty-whitey trope transplanted to sci-fi, where the WASP space-fairing protagonist

    • In Season 1, Episode 23 of Star Trek, the Enterprise visits two worlds that are at continuous war. The war is ran via computers, and people that are victims in a "hit" report to a facility to be terminated.

      That's not how it would ever work. One side would eventually cheat, commit the people who didn't suicide to war, and win.

      I still don't understand how reporting to a facility to be terminated is any better than being blown up directly by a bomb or shot with a rifle or whatever. You're still dead because of war, why would people not see that war had a cost?

      I'm clearly missing something.

      • I still don't understand how reporting to a facility to be terminated is any better than being blown up directly by a bomb or shot with a rifle or whatever. You're still dead because of war, why would people not see that war had a cost?

        Lack of property damage, no suffering from mortal wounds before death, no loss of limbs due to explosions, etc. There are up sides. I stand by my assessment, though. Even if you bred your people to be sheep and lie down, a wolf would eventually stand up.

  • Endless Sky has an interesting endless autonomous war.

  • Which for some reason has a 5 IMDB rating.

    You could just build fast drones loaded with explosives and aim them at aerial targets or ground targets. Also probably won't turn into the floor wax desert topping the F-35 has.

    • Arming drones instead of Kamakazi drones. The wing design for long loiter time means slow flight and that's bad for intercepting enemies.
  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Wednesday February 27, 2019 @07:08PM (#58191374)
    There was a cost to the war. The people were killed. It was kind of a naff plot.

    What we need to worry about is a future where the rich and powerful don't need us. Where virtually everything is done by a small number of machines and a tiny engineering class who serve the ruling class, much like the merchant class served the aristocracy of old in the Dark Ages.

    Right now the rich need us to buy their stuff and they need to balance military and civilian life. Once they've got automated kill bots, custom life extension treatments and robots to make their baubles we're all pretty much worthless to them. History has not been kind to people who aren't needed for anything in particular...
    • by mentil ( 1748130 )

      Automation is an important part of it but there's a huge piece of the puzzle you're missing. Right now, standard macroeconomic theory is that the population needs to constantly grow or else the economy is going to be fucked. So long as the upper class believes this, they're going to be reluctant to cull the population (wouldn't be that hard; if the stores stopped carrying food, few people would know where to obtain it.)

      However, once they figure out a way to maintain their standard of living despite a huge d

    • How would the world be a worse place with a mass die-off of working class deplorables, deliberate or otherwise? The standard wisdom is that these people have outlived their welcome and need to be replaced by new immigrants.
    • The working poor today have more than kings did 200 years ago, but don't consider themselves rich. Having all that money/stuff won't make them happy unless they have the poor starving rabble to lord it over.
    • by mjwx ( 966435 )

      What we need to worry about is a future where the rich and powerful don't need us. Where virtually everything is done by a small number of machines and a tiny engineering class who serve the ruling class, much like the merchant class served the aristocracy of old in the Dark Ages. .

      At that point the rich and powerful need to worry about us. The Dark ages which were largely feudal, this means a king didn't wield absolute power, he had lords swear fealty who had lesser nobles swearing fealty to them It was effectively a pyramid scheme. So many kings of Europe were usurped by their own lords. Power and wealth were distributed, of course there was a huge divide between rich and poor, but it was pretty well distributed. National governance like we have now didn't really exist until last ce

  • The Star Trek example is irrelevant, since when US makes a no US victim war, the other party gets a lot of victims, including many innocents.

  • The company says the jets will cost a "fraction" of a manned fighter.

    So... $75M each instead of, say, $85 for the Lockheed F-35. And $70M w/o the undercoating.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      The company says the jets will cost a "fraction" of a manned fighter.

      So... $75M each instead of, say, $85 for the Lockheed F-35. And $70M w/o the undercoating.

      Or $400M each - a fraction can be greater than 1.

  • Good thing we won't be holding AI music concerts in a city that's actually a giant robot any time soon.
    • The real danger with a concert in a Macross future isn't Macross Plus, It's Macross. You could wind up with Lynn Minmei.

    • No, but they didn't shy away from the tech even after that. Macross Frontier has the tech re-purposed as exactly what the article describes from Boeing - little fighter wingmen to help out the main jet.

      http://mahq.net/mecha/macross/macrossf/aif-7s.htm

  • by turp182 ( 1020263 ) on Wednesday February 27, 2019 @07:35PM (#58191486) Journal

    It's clear that the future of traditional war will be air power. Bombers taking off from Missouri, the heartland of the US, were used in the Iraq war. Their is no distance they can't cover with assisted fueling.

    Why didn't the ships in Star Wars auto-fly and auto-target/kill?

    Spielberg didn't see the future. James Cameron sort of got it with Terminator, except the machines weren't very good shots.

    Automated war is terrifying.

    From the ground, motion detection and enemy identification from a mile is not out of our reach (I'm sure some our working on this, it's not complicated).

    It's this sort of tech that will result in a nuclear exchange (EMP = stop that shit). In my opinion.

    How easy is this stuff? Here's an auto-aiming Nerf sentry turrent:
    https://newatlas.com/nerf-vulc... [newatlas.com]

    What's my point? I don't actually know. But automating war creates more enemies. Not waging war, not so much.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      War between states with armies of automated kill-bots will be like nuclear war - prevented by mutually assured destruction. The problem will be places that don't have armies of kill-bots.

      Can't just nuke Afghanistan to get rid of the Taliban, because nuking is unacceptable and tends to result in nearby nuclear powers responding. But sending kill-bots there... Well we have seen what is done with drones, which are half way to kill-bots. Flown remotely, impersonal and very likely to end up killing a lot of inno

    • Why didn't the ships in Star Wars auto-fly and auto-target/kill?

      Spielberg didn't see the future. James Cameron sort of got it with Terminator, except the machines weren't very good shots.

      Mostly due to prejudice against droids. The Star Wars universe was highly automated. So much that a force of one million men made a difference in a galactic battle. Remember that the combat forces for just one nation in WW2 could ranging in the double digits of millions. The actual number of working humans on the Death Star was probably not near as high as some people suspect with most of the thing just being automated machine. Spielberg saw the future and it was more like Dune or The Culture than Terminato

  • by Dave Emami ( 237460 ) on Wednesday February 27, 2019 @07:57PM (#58191578) Homepage
    "You can be my wingman anytime." "Bullshit, meatbag. You can be mine."
  • it's not a fighter if it performs those tasks, that's not what fighters do

    • by mentil ( 1748130 )

      Fighters are sometimes used for low-altitude recon, if there's a possibility of engagement. Similarly, snipers aren't always sent in to head-shot everyone they can, but to destroy weapons/equipment.

      • that's "sometimes" for a fighter... but a craft that 100% of the time doesn't fight doesn't get to be called a fighter

  • by Anonymous Coward

    The stealth fighter doesnt even have afterburners. They should call the F-117A a light bomber, really.

    Truth is there really hasnt been any so-called "dog fighting" since the jet engine took over. Whoever sees the enemy first and fires their super sonic air to air missles usually wins.

    • there were dog fights until mid 70s, look up the Israeli vs. Arab

    • The stealth fighter doesnt even have afterburners. They should call the F-117A a light bomber, really.

      The F-117 isn't a fighter. It was just given that designation to confuse the russians.

  • by swell ( 195815 ) <jabberwock@poetic.com> on Wednesday February 27, 2019 @09:30PM (#58191906)

    The given example was poor: there was a huge cost in lives sacrificed willingly.

    In the real world there is also a huge cost. Money and lives. Of course, when we have the autonomous weapons, it's foreign lives so they aren't really a loss to us. But what about the money?

    When our military costs, combined with the cost of subverting other governments and also the surveillance of our own citizens total more than the military cost of all other countries combined, then we can count that as a significant cost.

    If instead, a similar amount of money were invested in helping countries instead of threatening them, we would be loved and wouldn't need a military. If some of that money was invested in helping our own citizens instead of threatening them with Big Brother, we could empty our jails and many hospital emergency rooms. If we put some money into parental guidance and education and a proactive health care system, we could have a model society.

    But then Boeing's profits would drop considerably, and their donations to congresspeople would follow.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      it's foreign lives so they aren't really a loss to us.

      Well, it depends on the reason for war. Sometimes, more often than not, you need them to do something for you, or there is significant cost for you if you will have to do something instead of them, and then foreign lives matter too. However if their existence is only a negative for you and are easily substituted ... hello genocide!

      If instead, a similar amount of money were invested in helping countries instead of threatening them, we would be loved and wouldn't need a military.

      You will always need a military, but you could shrink the amount of tasks you need it to perform - they are not all necessary, and downsize the standing military, reduce costs. Th

    • If instead, a similar amount of money were invested in helping countries instead of threatening them, we would be loved and wouldn't need a military. If some of that money was invested in helping our own citizens instead of threatening them with Big Brother, we could empty our jails and many hospital emergency rooms. If we put some money into parental guidance and education and a proactive health care system, we could have a model society.

      Unfortunately, what you propose doesn't work either. It's been tried.

      In the case of helping countries, the big problem you overlook is that the countries that need the most help are the most messed up politically. Poverty tends to go hand in hand with dictatorships. Sure, there are exceptions where dictatorships or single party rule happens in countries that are successfully economically, but if you find a list of the countries that need the most help, you'll see it is in places that don't have fu

      • You can teach parenting in school. Every single modern country except America has figured out how to control medical expenses. Universal health care is cheaper than the American system, so you already have the money to implement it.
    • The given example was poor: there was a huge cost in lives sacrificed willingly.

      That's true. I can't fathom how anyone would see that as "no cost".

      If instead, a similar amount of money were invested in helping countries instead of threatening them, we would be loved and wouldn't need a military.

      You can't be that naive. It reminds me of the couple that insisted hate was a false construct and then proceeded to get themselves killed by ISIS.
      Humans will always have motivations to covet, attack, and take from other humans, whether you're nice to them or not. We wouldn't be "loved", we'd just as likely be "used".
      Every country needs a military. Being nice to people does not stop them from wanting your resources and taking them by force

  • by Jim Sadler ( 3430529 ) on Wednesday February 27, 2019 @11:53PM (#58192316)
    The human body is the failure point in modern fighters. G forces must be limited for a human to survive. The human can not be on that plane. Further human life support systems take up a lot of space. With robotic warriors no cock pit is required. That space can be used for fuel and weapons. Then there is another cost factor. Ruined or dead airmen and their survivors cost a fortune. No more mangled men and bodies to deal with at all. No human operated aircraft will be able to compete in combat. And it gets better. Ships also are better without sailors. Imagine a mother ship launching a smaller ship for the last 300 miles into a combat zone. The zombie ship needs no humans etc.. Once that zombie is on site it can wage all kinds of war more effectively than a human occupied vessel. In essence the conventional warship becomes a tow boat and fuel and weapons hauler that stands outside the battle arena. These days a small unmanned zombie warship could easily have more fire power than weapons of all types, used by all sides during WW2. And we don't even have to worry about radiation in the combat zone. So far air and water are the easy places for automatons. Land has far more challenges but we will soon see the Army soldiers become a historic oddity. These things are already taking place.
    • This is exactly correct. There is no ethical downside to this. (At the current level of tech). It will almost be a "cyborg" vehicle - drone (with human control) + automated action.

      Can we extrapolate this to the future where a dictator can control his own people with no fear of his armed forces deserting him? Yes. Absolutely. But this piece of tech is not that. Not even close.
      • This is exactly correct. There is no ethical downside to this. (At the current level of tech).

        Reminds me of a story by Robert Sheckley. The Apocalypse has come the devil is attacking. Humanity sends out it's robot legions to fight the devil and eventually defeat him. God arrives, the angels sing, and all the robots are lifted up to heaven.

    • by Shotgun ( 30919 )

      Not only are they taking place, we have already trained our young men to control these fighting ships. The tow vehicle, heavily shielded and exquisitely comfortable, will have very high tech gaming chairs to control the machines from. Your last LAN party was basic training for tomorrows war games.

  • Sheesh, I know I'm being a grammar Nazi here, but this one is a pet peeve of mine. The past participle of "to run" is "run" not "ran." So the sentence should be "is run" not "is ran." I'm constantly telling students of my CFD courses that simulations are "run," they're not "ran."
  • Somewhere i got the impression that the US Navy is already building an automated war ship. i would be shocked if they have not done so. There is and has been one civilian helicopter making daily deliveries back and forth across the Mexican border for several years. It has no pilot.Obviously if a device can carry mail or whatever it can carry any number of military devices. One good use for automated helicopters is picking up wounded warriors from battlefields far to dangerous to end in a piloted c
    • Somewhere i got the impression that the US Navy is already building an automated war ship. i would be shocked if they have not done so.

      I would be. At least for one of any size. Until they develop systems that can do damage control, fix what is broken, put out fires, stopper leaks, etc, combat ships will have crews.

  • 3/2 is a fraction...

  • They want money. And they only get it if people buy their shit, which they won't do if they don't need a replacement. Of course they want war to continue forever! Its good for the bottom line.

As you will see, I told them, in no uncertain terms, to see Figure one. -- Dave "First Strike" Pare

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