TECH The Pentagon Is Experimenting With Using Artificial Intelligence To "See Days In Advance"

Melodi

Disaster Cat
I wonder why they don't just call this Project Merlin or something, I guess that would just be too obvious. But wow, AI predicting the future for the Pentagon, what could possibly go wrong?

The Pentagon Is Experimenting With Using Artificial Intelligence To "See Days In Advance"
The Pentagon aims to use cutting-edge cloud networks and artificial intelligence systems to anticipate adversaries' moves before they make them.

BY BRETT TINGLEY JULY 30, 2021
THE WAR ZONE
Global Information Dominance ExperimentsDOD
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U.S. Northern Command (NORTHCOM) recently conducted a series of tests known as the Global Information Dominance Experiments, or GIDE, which combined global sensor networks, artificial intelligence (AI) systems, and cloud computing resources in an attempt to "achieve information dominance" and "decision-making superiority." According to NORTHCOM leadership, the AI and machine learning tools tested in the experiments could someday offer the Pentagon a robust “ability to see days in advance," meaning it could predict the future with some reliability based on evaluating patterns, anomalies, and trends in massive data sets. While the concept sounds like something out of Minority Report, the commander of NORTHCOM says this capability is already enabled by tools readily available to the Pentagon.

General Glen VanHerck, Commander of NORTHCOM and North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD), told reporters at the Pentagon this week that this was the third test of GIDE, conducted in conjunction with all 11 combatant commands “collaborating in the same information space using the same exact capabilities.” The experiment largely centered around contested logistics and information advantage, two cornerstones of the new warfighting paradigm recently proposed by the Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. A full transcript of VanHerck's press briefing is available online.


USAF/TSGT. PETER THOMPSON
A Starlink antenna deployed during the Global Information Dominance Experiment 3 at Alpena Combat Readiness Training Center, Alpena, Michigan, July 15, 2021.

VanHerck told reporters that this AI-enabled decision making could actually allow for a type of proactive forecasting that sounds truly like the stuff of science fiction:

The machine learning and the artificial intelligence can detect changes [and] we can set parameters where it will trip an alert to give you the awareness to go take another sensor such as GEOINT on-satellite capability to take a closer look at what might be ongoing in a specific location.

[...]

[W]hat we've seen is the ability to get way further what I call left, left of being reactive to actually being proactive. And I'm talking not minutes and hours, I'm talking days.

The ability to see days in advance creates decision space. Decision space for me as an operational commander to potentially posture forces to create deterrence options to provide that to the secretary or even the president. To use messaging, the information space to create deterrence options and messaging and if required to get further ahead and posture ourselves for defeat.

Gen. VanHerck says this most recent experiment, GIDE 3, was a way of testing “a fundamental change in how we use information and data to increase decision space for leaders from the tactical level to the strategic level -- not only military leaders, but also gives opportunity for our civilian leaders.” The NORTHCOM and NORAD Commander claims that GIDE shifts the Department of Defense’s (DOD) focus “away from pure defeat mechanisms for homeland defense towards earlier, deter-and-deny actions well outside a conflict” and will allow faster, more proactive decision making.


To do this, the experiment used artificial intelligence tools to perform real-time analysis of data gathered by a network of sensors across the globe including “commercially available information” from unnamed partners. That information, VanHerck says, could be shared via cloud-based systems to allies and other partners in real-time, should NORTHCOM decide to. The tests also included support from the Joint Artificial Intelligence Center and Project Maven, a DOD project that leverages AI to sift through massive amounts of persistent surveillance imagery and rapidly identify useful information.

The U.S. Air Force and U.S. Army have already been testing similar concepts which are exploring the convergences of real-time data collection and artificial intelligence in order to enable faster and more informed decision making. VanHerck says the GIDE 3 experiments were different, however, in that NORTHCOM isn't looking to create new tools or concepts, but instead use what is already available to give the highest levels of military leadership a new level of awareness:

The primary [difference] between what I'm doing and what the services are doing is I'm focused at the operational to strategic level. Taking data and information that is available today. That's key.

We're not creating new capabilities to go get data and information. This information exists from today's satellites, today's radar, today's undersea capabilities, today’s cyber, today's intel capabilities. The data exists. What we're doing is making that data available… and shared into a cloud, where machine learning and artificial intelligence look at it and they process it really quickly and provide it to decision makers, which I call decision superiority.”

This gives us days of advanced warning and ability to react. Where, in the past, we may not have put eyes on with an analyst of a GEOINT satellite image, now we are doing that within minutes or near real-time. That's the primary difference that I'm talking about.


DOD/SSGT BRITTANY A. CHASE
U.S. Northern Command Commander U.S. Air Force General Glen D. VanHerck speaks during a press briefing about the completed global information dominance experiment (GIDE) 3, at the Pentagon, Washington, D.C., July 28, 2021.

The types of global cloud services, data fusion, and other concepts used in the experiments aren’t anything new per se, and VanHerck says that NORTHCOM has simply “stitched everything together to make this happen” on a military level. “I wouldn't think of this as a thing or a- you know, a gadget we're going to buy and move forward,” the general told reporters. “This is a software-based capabilities [sic] utilizing technology that is readily available today.” While the systems used in GIDE 3 are still being tested and developed, VanHerck used the metaphor of “building the bike while we ride it,” which he elaborated on earlier this month in a War on the Rocks op-ed.


USAF/SSGT. SEAN CARNES
USAF personnel align a Tampa Microwave Satellite Terminal to receive signals while supporting a combat camera team during the Global Information Dominance Experiment 3.

VanHerck also added that United States Space Command (SPACECOM) was “intimately involved” with the experiments, stating that the experiments explored options to hold competitors’ space-based and land-based capabilities at risk, while also considering the fact that potential adversaries would put our own space assets at risk in any conflict.

In his remarks, the NORAD commander obliquely referred to Russia and China, claiming that the United States currently has “two peer competitors, both nuclear-armed, that are competing against us on a daily basis.” When a reporter then asked the general to elaborate about the GIDE 3 exercise, the Pentagon wouldn’t name a specific simulated adversary but noted it was “focused on a peer competitor.”


USAF/SSGT. NICHOLAS BYERS
Air National Guard personnel monitor aircraft at Tyndall Air Force Base during the Global Information Dominance Experiment 3 on July 14, 2021.

The Pentagon's third Global Information Dominance Experiment is just one more signal that future conflicts could largely be determined by which forces can deploy the best artificial intelligence systems and leverage information the fastest. Given the rate and scale at which data flows around the world thanks to modern communication networks, satellites, and other technologies, it could be in the very near future that battlefield decisions will be dominated by suggestions from AI tools, and eventually, left to AI themselves, as they can make decisions much faster than a human could. But for now, just being able to better predict the future is of extreme interest to America's top military leadership.

Contact the author: Brett@TheDrive.com

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Melodi

Disaster Cat
I remember when governments used remote viewing to get their info
That used people, and I hope they really do still have a secret program as I've heard that they do (the accurate viewers were just too accurate to ignore as a PIECE of intelligence, not to be use solo).

This probably IS based on Cliff's work, he has said that decades ago when he was young he and his then partner contacted an "agency" as dumb but patriotic Americans to offer their great discoveries and sell them to whomever (believing at the time it was the patriotic thing to do).

The men in black showed up, listened and they got a "no thank you" and went on their way working on their Civilian Webbots, but pretty soon afterward they heard that the Pentagon had their own "Webbots" program and they were doing it their own way - aka without Cliff or his programs.

When I showed the article to Nightwolf he also remembers Cliff saying this and also thought that this current announcement is probably the ultimate outcome of the research.

Nightwolf is as disturbed as I am by this - again, this could be a great tool when used with other forms of intelligence - forms that use humans from regular analysts to proper blind remote viewers.

We are both concerned the Pentagon/Powers that Be could get way to reliant on what might seem like a "miracle" predictor until it either misses something or decides do something "interesting" on its own (like the google super-computers that invented their own language and tried to hide it from the programmers and were shut down).
 

CaBuckeye

Contributing Member
To do this, the experiment used artificial intelligence tools to perform real-time analysis of data gathered by a network of sensors across the globe including “commercially available information” from unnamed partners. Like all
Statistics, if your raw data is corrupt or manipulated by others( think MSM polls), then any conclusions will be very suspect. I would imagine that any bad guy planning would include a program to put out false and misleading info to skew the AI's weighted observations and conclusions. This could be similiar to but on a far greater data infomation scale to what the Allies did in WW2 to conceal the Normandy invasion. The amount of false / fake data generated on social media, MSM among other data sharing sites would tend to bear this observation out.
 

Techwreck

Veteran Member
Looking at the post about warships spoofing their locations, I too wonder, what could possibly go wrong.
Can the AI be spoofed or lied to?
Hope it's not getting much data from the MSM.
 

Hacker

Computer Hacking Pirate
I remember when governments used remote viewing to get their info

For all we know, they might still do that.

Also, I know the government created webbot-like programs, trying to use a similar tech to what Clif High developed.
 

Kris Gandillon

The Other Curmudgeon
_______________
“Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.”
- Arthur C. Clarke

AI is not different. It is a very advanced technology.


Computers and cell phones are very advanced technologies and for many, including some in our midst, they are still magic. For others who have dived deep enough into them they are no longer magic because they have learned the inner workings of the hardware and software and now understand the underlying technology.

We use AI to "predict" that something is likely to fail in the near future...seconds, minutes, hours, days from now based on "events" that we detect on our networks and in our systems and we can then take either manual steps or automated steps to avoid the problem or at least isolate and contain the extent of the disruption. An example is failing over from one data center to another when we detect a potential problem brewing in one data center.

A component of AI is "Machine Learning". Oftentimes, there is a tremendous amount of "noise" in the data that a human simply cannot easily isolate in a timely fashion. Algorithms can be developed and tweaked to look thru the noise in the data at the speed of computers and detect patterns that often point to an impending failure or disruption.

Think of it as "when we have seen THIS, THAT usually happens within a certain amount of time if we don't take steps to avoid it."

In simple terms, your water temp gauge, tire pressure indicators, and check engine light are primitive forms of AI...advanced warnings.."if you don't do something soon, you are going to over-heat your engine, or have a flat, or have engine trouble." AI is just the next step, in a much more complex world.
 

Dozdoats

On TB every waking moment
U.S. Northern Command (NORTHCOM)

And NORTHCOM is the MACOM overseeing CONUS. It was established in the late 1990s IIRC.

That should add to the cold chills factor....
=============================

...checking...

About USNORTHCOM
Search domain northcom.milhttps://www.northcom.mil/About-USNORTHCOM/
ABOUT USNORTHCOM. U.S. Northern Command (USNORTHCOM) was established Oct. 1, 2002 to provide command and control of Department of Defense (DOD) homeland defense efforts and to coordinate defense support of civil authorities. USNORTHCOM defends America's homeland — protecting our people, national power, and freedom of action.

-- About USNORTHCOM
 

thereisnofork

Veteran Member
They may be using probabilistic quantum AI to do the predictions. There is a huge amount of interest in this as it looks at multiple scenarios in parallel and rates them in terms of probability. Scary because we are possibly years behind the Chinese at this point.
 

Groucho

Has No Life - Lives on TB
What do they have left? We forced them into this when we purchased F15's and nuclear weapons.
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
The UK Daily Mail version of this article...

Pentagon is using artificial intelligence to predict the future and give it 'days of advanced warning' on attacks on sensitive sites like the Panama Canal
US Northern Command says Global Information Dominance Experiments can make the military proactive toward threats
'I'm talking not minutes and hours, I'm talking days,' said General Glen VanHerck
In a recent test, GIDE focused on a scenario where communication in the Panama Canal was compromised
AI machine learning can sift through data to notice changes humans might miss
GIDE shares data already being gathered to allow for 'decision-making superiority,' VanHerck said
By DAN AVERY FOR DAILYMAIL.COM

PUBLISHED: 17:47, 2 August 2021 | UPDATED: 18:11, 2 August 2021

The Pentagon is stealing a page from Minority Report with an experimental artificial-intelligence program that can look 'days in advance' and predict possible attacks on vulnerable locations.

The Global Information Dominance Experiments, or GIDE, use machine learning to sift through vast amounts of data to notice tiny changes that humans might miss - such as the number of cars increasing or decreasing in a parking lot - which might indicate an evolving threat.

The program can then alert human agents who can take a closer look at the location.

The latest experiment - GIDE 3 - focused on 'contested logistics', in a scenario where lines of communication in the Panama Canal were compromised, military officials said.

General Glen VanHerck, commander of the US Northern Command (NORTHCOM), said GIDE combines artificial intelligence and cloud computing resources with data from sources around the world to 'achieve information dominance' and 'decision-making superiority.'

Completed earlier this month, the third test of GIDE was conducted in conjunction with all 11 US combatant commands 'collaborating in the same information space using the same exact capabilities', he told a press conference.

The new system represents a 'leap forward in our ability to maintain domain awareness, achieve information dominance, and provide decision superiority in competition and crisis,' he said.

'GIDE spurs faster decisions and provides proactive options by making new technologies more accessible and more effective.'

Representatives from all 11 US combatant commands participated in the third series of Global Information Dominance Experiments (GIDE) at US Northern Command Headquarters in Peterson Space Force Base near Colorado Springs, Colorado +2
Representatives from all 11 US combatant commands participated in the third series of Global Information Dominance Experiments (GIDE) at US Northern Command Headquarters in Peterson Space Force Base near Colorado Springs, Colorado

Currently, VanHerck said, the agency is usually in a 'reactive environment,' responding to rival nation's actions.

'We can set parameters where it will trip an alert to give you the awareness to go take another sensor such as GEOINT on-satellite capability to take a closer look at what might be ongoing in a specific location,' VanHerck told reporters.

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'What we've seen is the ability to get way further what I call left of being reactive to actually being proactive,' he added. 'And I'm talking not minutes and hours, I'm talking days.

Established in 1958 at the height of the Cold War, NORTHCOM is responsible for defending North America primarily from air attacks (via the North American Aerospace Defense Command, or NORAD) and providing maritime warning.'

According to General Glen VanHerck (pictured) GIDE takes existing data and applies machine learning and artificial intelligence to massive amounts of intelligence, giving decision makers advance notice of potential crises. 'And I'm talking not minutes and hours, I'm talking days,' said VanHerck +2
According to General Glen VanHerck (pictured) GIDE takes existing data and applies machine learning and artificial intelligence to massive amounts of intelligence, giving decision makers advance notice of potential crises. 'And I'm talking not minutes and hours, I'm talking days,' said VanHerck

VanHerck explained that the extra time offered by GIDE creates 'decision space' for him to develop various deterrence strategies to present to Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin and President Biden.

While the US Air Force and Army are also leveraging AI to predict conflict scenarios, VanHerck stressed the DOD system uses data that's already garnered from satellites, radar, human intel and other sources.

According to The Drive, GIDE 3 also included support from the Joint Artificial Intelligence Center and Project Maven, a DOD sub-group that uses AI to sift through massive amounts 'of persistent surveillance imagery' to quickly identify useful intel.

'What we're doing is making that data available and shared into a cloud where machine learning and artificial intelligence look at it,' VanHerck said.

'And they process it really quickly and provide it to decision-makers, which I call decision superiority. This gives us days of advanced warning and ability to react.'

Read more:
NORTHCOM Commander Gen. Glen D. VanHerck Conducts Press Briefing on North American Aerospace Defense Command and U.S. Northern Command Global Information Dominance Experiments > U.S. Department of Defense > Transcript
Combatant Commands
The Pentagon Is Experimenting With Using Artificial Intelligence To "See Days In Advance"
 

goosebeans

Veteran Member
(like the google super-computers that invented their own language and tried to hide it from the programmers and were shut down).

This is really, really intriguing! So does this mean that deceit isn't inherent to humanity, is it mathematical? Could we ourselves actually be some type of pre programmed machines - that sometimes go off the rails? My mind's going in all kinds of directions with this little tidbit of info! "Nothing is as it seems" takes on a whole new countenance!

I'm probably now on Dennis's "mind-lock, nut jobs" list!
 

Doc1

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Here are my non-AI .mil predictions: The generals and colonels will get nice COLA adjustments, bonuses and salary increases. The Military Industrial Complex contractors will get lavish contracts and the grunts will continue to die in our "non-war" wars.

Amazing predictions, eh? Did I leave anything out?

Best
Doc
 

Seeker22

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Here are my non-AI .mil predictions: The generals and colonels will get nice COLA adjustments, bonuses and salary increases. The Military Industrial Complex contractors will get lavish contracts and the grunts will continue to die in our "non-war" wars.

Amazing predictions, eh? Did I leave anything out?

Best
Doc

Yeah- mask up on base.
If there ever was an order to disobey, it might be that one?
 

rob0126

Veteran Member
The d-wave quantum computer system is probably what they are using.

But since we know about the d-wave, they probably have one far more advanced.

My guess, the A.I super computer has something to do with the beast of revelation.
 
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