The AI Daily Brief: Artificial Intelligence News and Analysis - Is Ukraine the First "AI War"?
Episode Date: February 11, 2024Ukraine has become a testing lab for advanced AI integrations into combat operations. ABOUT THE AI BREAKDOWN The AI Breakdown helps you understand the most important news and discussions in AI. Su...bscribe to The AI Breakdown newsletter: https://theaibreakdown.beehiiv.com/subscribe Subscribe to The AI Breakdown on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@TheAIBreakdown Join the community: bit.ly/aibreakdown Learn more: http://breakdown.network/
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Today on the AI breakdown, we're asking whether Ukraine is the first AI war.
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Welcome back to the AI breakdown.
One of the things that makes artificial intelligence right now so fascinating for me
is the way that it is happening at the smallest levels in terms of our daily lives and how we work and how we play,
how we tell stories to our kids, and also,
on the highest levels of societal self-conception questions, politics, and conflict. Time this week
published a fascinating piece called How Tech Giants Turned Ukraine into an AI War Lab. It's a 21-minute read,
and so I'm certainly not going to read all of it. But the story starts with an anecdote at the beginning
of June when Alex Karp, who is, of course, the CEO of Palantir Technologies, crossed the border between
Poland and Ukraine on foot and was sped away to eventually be escorted into the bunker of the
presidential palace, making him at the time the first leader of a major Western company to meet
with Ukrainian President Zelensky, since Russia had invaded three months earlier.
Wright's time over a round of espressoes, Karp told Zelensky that he was ready to open an office
in Kiev and deploy Palantir's data and artificial intelligence software to support Ukraine's
defense.
Karp believed they could team up in, quote, ways that allow David to beat a modern-day Goliath.
Time continues, the Ukrainians weren't sure what to think of a man making grandiose promises,
but they were familiar with the company's reputation, said Jacob Helberg, a national security expert,
they are the AI arms dealers of the 21st century. In Ukraine, Karptold time, he saw the opportunity
to fulfill Palantir's mission to, quote, defend the West and to, quote, scare the F out of our
enemies. Now a year and a half later, Palantir is incredibly integrated across Ukrainian agencies.
More than half a dozen, including the Ministry of Defense, the economy, and education, are using
Palantir software to do things like analyze satellite imagery, drone footage and reports from the
ground, to do everything from make military decisions to collect evidence of war crimes, to clearing
landmines, resettling refugees, and more. Now, the argument of the peace is summed up by former
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Mark Millie, who told reporters last year that the
collaboration between the Ukrainian armed forces and military AI companies represents, quote,
the most significant fundamental change in the character of war ever recorded in history.
Time writes, it can be hard to see that from afar. By all accounts, the war in Ukraine has settled
into a stalemate, with both sides hammering away with 20th century weapons like artillery and tanks.
Some view the claims of high-tech breakthroughs with skepticism, arguing that the grinding
war of attrition is little affected by the deployment of AI tools. But Ukraine and its private sector
allies say they are playing a longer game. Creating a war lab for the future. Now, interestingly,
there's so much activity going on in terms of the military applications of AI in Ukraine,
that there's actually a military startup accelerator called D3 or Dare to Defend Democracy,
which includes foreign investors like Google CEO Eric Schmidt,
who have invested more than $10 million.
Wright's time.
In trips to Ukraine, Schmidt said he became convinced that the country's front lines would produce
breakthroughs in the use of AI and drones.
Schmidt said, there's simply so much volume, there's so many players, there's so much innovation.
It's really impressive.
Now, one of the things that the article questions is whether there are risks that are being ignored
around the proliferation of these strategies.
Certainly, there is some directionality towards other U.S. allies.
As Time writes, citing Ukraine as a blueprint,
Taiwan has recruited commercial drone makers and aerospace firms to embed within the military
to build up its drone program amid rising tensions with China.
Last month, Israel's defense ministry struck a deal with Palantir,
and Palantir executives were actually surprised that Israel allowed the partnership to be made public.
quote, almost as if the relationship itself would act as a military deterrence
according to a person familiar with the discussions.
Now, of course, the question is what about when it's not U.S. allies who deploy this type
of technology?
On that front, interestingly, the economist published a piece this week called Vladimir Putin
wants to catch up with the West in AI, although you can tell from the subheader that
the economist isn't really buying it, writing, good luck with that.
Now, this has been a recurring theme from Putin, and the point that the economist makes
is that even if you dismiss the realistic probability that Russia can meaningfully contribute
to innovation in this area, the fact that it is becoming such a public priority for Vladimir Putin
says a lot about where AI sits in the broader geopolitical realm. One of the things that is really
notable to me watching the news every day is the seismic gap between, on the one hand, the political
conversation about AI policy and regulation in D.C. and the military integration of AI in D.C.
even as politicians jawbone and propose their own ideas and talk about how important it is
to both regulate AI but also to preserve innovation, the military is just cruising along into
an AI-powered future. And not just the military but intelligence agencies and basically the entire
security apparatus. In other words, even as there is an AI arms race for the state of the art
between Google and OpenAI, there is also an actual AI arms race that is happening with potentially
massive implications for the future shape of the world. Anyways, really interesting stuff.
Highly recommend you check out that article in time. But for now, that is going to do it for today's
AI breakdown. Appreciate you listening or watching wherever you are. And until next time,
peace.
