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Killer Drones are now easy - 727Sky - 03-09-2024

Quote:AI drone that could hunt and kill people built in just hours by scientist 'for a game'
News
By Keumars Afifi-Sabet
published 2 days ago
The scientist who configured a small drone to target people with facial recognition and chase them at full speed warns we have no defenses against such weapons.
 
Comments (3)

[Image: Qo94CCUcUzTnMQDKMBBahE-320-80.jpg]
Luis Wenus, an entrepreneur and engineer, incorporated AI and facial recognition into the small drone so it could chase people down at full speed. (Image credit: simonkr via Getty Images)


It only takes a few hours to configure a small, commercially available drone to hunt down a target by itself, a scientist has warned.
Luis Wenus, an entrepreneur and engineer, incorporated an artificial intelligence (AI) system into a small drone to chase people around "as a game," he wrote in a post on March 2 on X, formerly known as Twitter. But he soon realized it could easily be configured to contain an explosive payload.

Collaborating with Robert Lukoszko, another engineer, he configured the drone to use an object-detection model to find people and fly toward them at full speed, he said. The engineers also built facial recognition into the drone, which works at a range of up to 33 feet (10 meters). This means a weaponized version of the drone could be used to attack a specific person or set of targets.
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"This literally took just a few hours to build, and made me realize how scary it is," Wenus wrote. "You could easily strap a small amount of explosives on these and let 100's of them fly around. We check for bombs and guns but THERE ARE NO ANTI-DRONE SYSTEMS FOR BIG EVENTS & PUBLIC SPACES YET."
Wenus described himself as an "open source absolutist," meaning he believes in always sharing code and software through open source channels. He also identifies as an "e/acc" — which is a school of thinking among AI researchers that refers to wanting to accelerate AI research regardless of the downsides, due to a belief that the upsides will always outweigh them. He said, however, that he would not publish any code relating to this experiment.


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He also warned that a terror attack could be orchestrated in the near future using this kind of technology. While people need technical knowledge to engineer such a system, it will become easier and easier to write the software as time passes, partially due to advancements in AI as an assistant in writing code, he noted.
Wenus said his experiment showed that society urgently needs to build anti-drone systems for civilian spaces where large crowds could gather. There are several countermeasures that society can build, according to Robin Radar, including cameras, acoustic sensors and radar to detect drones. Disrupting them, however, could require technologies such as radio frequency jammers, GPS spoofers, net guns, as well as high-energy lasers.
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While such weapons haven't been deployed in civilian environments, they have been previously conceptualized and deployed in the context of warfare. Ukraine, for example, has developed explosive drones in response to Russia's invasion, according to the Wall Street Journal (WSJ).
The U.S. military is also working on ways to build and control swarms of small drones that can attack targets. It follows the U.S. Navy's efforts after it first demonstrated that it could control a swarm of 30 drones with explosives in 2017, according to MIT Technology Review.
https://www.livescience.com/technology/engineering/ai-drone-that-could-hunt-and-kill-people-built-in-just-hours-by-scientist-for-a-game


RE: Killer Drones are now easy - Snarl - 03-09-2024

Somebody opened the lid on Pandora's Box again.

I'm pretty good at shooting trap and skeet. Doubtful I could take out a drone I didn't know was coming. Plus ... who carries a shotgun around with them all the time?

Laughing


RE: Killer Drones are now easy - Ninurta - 03-10-2024

AR-15's are So old school when it comes to mass casualty events! Step into the 21st century!

I've said it before, and I'll say it again - killers are ingenious, and if you prevent them from killing one way, they'll just find another. The problem is not in the implements of destruction, it's in the minds and hands behind them. Rather than banning inanimate objects, they need to concentrate on the killers animating them.

A dangerous man is a dangerous man, whether he uses a gun, a knife, a rock, a stick, or just his teeth. He's dangerous regardless of what is available to him. They might want to see to dangerous people, and leave the rest of us and our tools alone.

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RE: Killer Drones are now easy - EndtheMadnessNow - 03-10-2024

The next politician or president assassinated may be from a drone. Maybe even on American soil. Any gun that shoots a projectile will be worthless. Will require some kind of electro-magnetic ray gun or tractor beam or sophisticated frequency jammer. Next will be some kind of invisible 'fence' over Washington. This will keep the MIC in business for years & decades. Reagan's Star Wars on steroids and meth.

[Image: tnSY9LF.jpg]


Assassin drone & Killer Drone swarm (2017)



Rather unsettling when you imagine all the possibilities.


RE: Killer Drones are now easy - Infolurker - 03-10-2024

This is the future of Policing in America.


RE: Killer Drones are now easy - Ninurta - 03-10-2024

(03-10-2024, 03:41 AM)Infolurker Wrote: This is the future of Policing in America.


As far as I know, police employment of drones against civilians is still illegal in Virginia. The next county over bought one several years ago, and has never been able to fly it because of state law making that illegal.



They're also a bit worried that some good ol' boy will shoot down their investment with a deer rifle if they ever tried to fly it. We've got some pretty good shots around here.

I've got 4 drones, but have never been able to keep one in the air more than about 27 seconds. Then they crash on their own. During that 27 seconds, I've also never been able to get one to fly in the direction I wanted it to fly. The reason I have 4 is because I kept thinking "maybe the next one will fly right"... but they never did, and now they sit here collecting dust. One of them has never even gotten off the ground - it requires some program to be installed on a "smart" phone to control it, and for a variety of reasons I'm not going to do that, so I have no idea if that one would have been the one to fly right or not.

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RE: Killer Drones are now easy - xuenchen - 03-10-2024

The Government wants everybody R.F.I.D.-microchipped for a reason!!

The options are endless !! 

Cool