2023-11-30
33 分钟I'm Dan Kurtz-Valen, and this is the Foreign Affairs Interview.
If we stand still,
I think we will see it a lot of the territory to China who may not have the same standards for security and safety,
who may not be interested in the sort of norms and guardrails that we want to put in place.
Hi, everyone.
I'm Kate Brannon, deputy editor at The Magazine, sitting in for Dan this week.
From killer robots to smarter logistics, artificial intelligence promises to change the way the U.S.
military fights and develops weapons.
As this new technology comes online,
the opportunities are coming into focus, but so are the dangers.
In a new piece for Foreign Affairs, Michelle Flournoy argues the U.S.
military has no choice but to move forward with AI and to do so quickly.
Flournoy served as the Pentagon's policy chief during the Obama administration.
I talked to her about how the Defense Department will need to change the way it does business
if it wants to integrate AI safely and responsibly.
Michelle,
thank you so much
for joining us today and for your recent peace and foreign affairs titled AI is already at war.
Well, good to see you.
Thanks for including me.