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posted by janrinok on Wednesday April 25 2018, @12:36PM   Printer-friendly
from the learn-to-love-the-bomb dept.

A new RAND Corporation paper finds that artificial intelligence has the potential to upend the foundations of nuclear deterrence by the year 2040.

While AI-controlled doomsday machines are considered unlikely, the hazards of artificial intelligence for nuclear security lie instead in its potential to encourage humans to take potentially apocalyptic risks, according to the paper.

During the Cold War, the condition of mutual assured destruction maintained an uneasy peace between the superpowers by ensuring that any attack would be met by a devastating retaliation. Mutual assured destruction thereby encouraged strategic stability by reducing the incentives for either country to take actions that might escalate into a nuclear war.

The new RAND publication says that in coming decades, artificial intelligence has the potential to erode the condition of mutual assured destruction and undermine strategic stability. Improved sensor technologies could introduce the possibility that retaliatory forces such as submarine and mobile missiles could be targeted and destroyed. Nations may be tempted to pursue first-strike capabilities as a means of gaining bargaining leverage over their rivals even if they have no intention of carrying out an attack, researchers say. This undermines strategic stability because even if the state possessing these capabilities has no intention of using them, the adversary cannot be sure of that.

"The connection between nuclear war and artificial intelligence is not new, in fact the two have an intertwined history," said Edward Geist, co-author on the paper and associate policy researcher at the RAND Corporation, a nonprofit, nonpartisan research organization. "Much of the early development of AI was done in support of military efforts or with military objectives in mind."

[...] Under fortuitous circumstances, artificial intelligence also could enhance strategic stability by improving accuracy in intelligence collection and analysis, according to the paper. While AI might increase the vulnerability of second-strike forces, improved analytics for monitoring and interpreting adversary actions could reduce miscalculation or misinterpretation that could lead to unintended escalation.


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  • (Score: 4, Insightful) by Grishnakh on Wednesday April 25 2018, @03:21PM (4 children)

    by Grishnakh (2831) on Wednesday April 25 2018, @03:21PM (#671651)

    Maybe, but I'm not really convinced of that. Global warming isn't really threatening our existence, it's threatening our lifestyle. Rising sea levels will render lots of low-lying cities uninhabitable, sure, but there's plenty of land higher up; the problem is dealing with that. And extreme weather is a problem, sure, but it's not going to make humans go extinct, it's just going to make us want to stay indoors a lot more. Our future, environmentally, probably looks a lot like 1983's Blade Runner. That sucks, but it's not extinction.

    We humans have been adapting to bad weather for much of our existence. It's the reason we're not all in Africa, and have spread around the world: we figured out how to deal with climates that we aren't biologically adapted for, and to take advantage of other food sources too. We're still doing it: people live on Antarctica now, which is only possible because of technology. We can do the same with whatever global warming throws at us, but it's going to suck if you live in a port city or like to spend time outside. But it isn't going to kill us off.

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  • (Score: 4, Insightful) by LoRdTAW on Wednesday April 25 2018, @04:55PM (3 children)

    by LoRdTAW (3755) on Wednesday April 25 2018, @04:55PM (#671697) Journal

    Climate change isn't just about sea levels. It's about preserving the massively complex biosphere we live in. Changes in one system effect others, these arent isolated processes.

    My major concern is how this effects water supplies which is THE cornerstone to civilization. What happens when farmers cant grow food? Reservoirs dry up? Cities cant supply water to residents? Hydro plants shut down and become useless? Steam and coal plants shut down from lack of feed water? And so on. The short answer is doom.

    • (Score: 2) by DannyB on Wednesday April 25 2018, @06:22PM

      by DannyB (5839) Subscriber Badge on Wednesday April 25 2018, @06:22PM (#671760) Journal

      Don't worry!

      The illusion of unlimited, cheap, clean drinking water will be with us for as long as humanity exists!

      Oh, wait . . .

      --
      People today are educated enough to repeat what they are taught but not to question what they are taught.
    • (Score: 1, Interesting) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday April 25 2018, @06:36PM

      by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday April 25 2018, @06:36PM (#671772)

      somewhat building on what GP said: this won't finish off humanity. If 90% of humanity died tomorrow, the human species would still be one of the most numerous mammalian species in the world. and the problems with water etc wouldn't really be problems any more.

    • (Score: 5, Interesting) by Grishnakh on Wednesday April 25 2018, @07:02PM

      by Grishnakh (2831) on Wednesday April 25 2018, @07:02PM (#671787)

      No, it's not doom. Sure, you might have some nasty resource wars, and you'll probably have giant famines with millions or even billions dead, but think about this: what happens if 6 billion people died tomorrow? We'd still have over 1.5 billion people. That's not extinction, it's just a massive shift in civilization. Humans have gone through that before, and didn't go extinct.

      I'm not trying to minimize the consequences of climate change, I'm just pointing out that it's extremely unlikely to result in human extinction (unless you're predicting it'll lead to massive nuclear war). It might wind up looking like some horribly dystopic sci-fi where much of the population is dead and the survivors are living in walled-off areas to protect themselves from zombies or whatever, but that still is not extinction; humanity can bounce back from that1. Even Star Trek's official history had humans going through a horrible WWIII which presumably wiped out a lot of the population before Zephram Cochrane invented the continuum distortion drive and met the Vulcans. Climate change by itself can't kill us all off.

      As for water supplies, I'm not sure where you're getting the idea that the earth will turn into a desert. There'll still be plenty of water (most of the planet is covered in it), and even freshwater isn't going anywhere as long as there's evaporation, clouds, rainfall, etc. Where the water is located could certainly change, though, rendering much of our existing hydro infrastructure useless, and this could have catastrophic results for many places dependent on it. But that's not going to wipe out every human on the planet. A genetically-engineered virus created by a rogue scientist, however, really could. Easily-built fusion bombs probably won't, but they could potentially wipe out so many that civilization collapses and the survivors are unable to rebuild (I don't think global climate change will have such a dramatic effect so quickly that this would happen; it'll be slower and people will adapt).