SMA hosted a speaker session with CAPT George Galdorisi, USN (Ret) (Director of Strategic Assessments and Technical Futures, Naval Information Warfare Center Pacific (NIWC Pacific)) as a part of its SMA General Speaker Series. CAPT Samuel Tangredi, PhD, USN (Ret) (Leidos Chair of Future Warfare Studies & Professor of National, Naval, and Maritime Strategy, U.S. Naval War College) participated in the Q&A session, along with CAPT Galdorisi, after the conclusion of the brief.
CAPT Galdorisi stated that technological advancements have always changed the way which wars have been fought. A new development for the US is having two peer competitors—Russia and China—in the field of technological innovation. The country that is able to integrate artificial intelligence (AI) specifically will have a significant advantage in future military conflicts. The DoD created a strategy to support its advancement of AI technologies that is focused on human-machine teaming and is founded on five pillars: technology, culture, user inputs, new users/new marketplaces, and processes.
CAPT Galdorisi emphasized that it will be important to alleviate the public’s fear of killer robots and other fears surrounding AI, which has been partly created and propagated by the media. The DoD’s past integration of AI into its armed forces has been focused on intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance. By successfully implementing these technologies into missions, operators will be better able to improve their processes for observing, orienting, deciding, and acting (OODA) in the OODA loop. CAPT Galdorisi concluded the presentation by stating that the Naval Information Warfare Center (NIWC) Pacific does not create systems; it improves them and makes them smarter. He also stated that it will likely be impossible for NIWC Pacific to engineer out all ethical dilemmas related to AI, rather it is looking for an optimal-case solution.
Note: We are aware that many government IT providers have blocked access to YouTube from government machines during the pandemic in response to bandwidth limitations. We recommend viewing the recording on YouTube from a non-government computer or listening to the audio file (below), if you are in this position.
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