The U.S. military was able “to strike a blistering 1,000 targets in the first 24 hours of its attack on Iran” thanks in part to its use of artificial intelligence, according to The Washington Post.
Anthropic sues the federal government—and kicks off a debate about free speech for artificial intelligence systems.
Politics / But make no mistake: The company is not one of the good guys. Elie Mystal Anthropic, makers of the “Claude” AI model, has sued the Department of Defense in two separate lawsuits, including ...
Anthropic is suing the Trump administration, asking federal courts to reverse the Pentagon’s decision designating the artificial intelligence company a “supply chain risk” over its refusal to allow un ...
Unusual Machines is a vertically integrated U.S. drone supplier, capitalizing on regulatory tailwinds and rapid reshoring of ...
The Iran war is testing America's ability to combat swarms of cheap drones that have become a staple of the modern ...
The unmanned ground vehicle Droid TW-7.62 was used by Ukrainian troops to contain an attack by Russian forces on the front ...
As the U.S. military expands its use of AI tools to pinpoint targets for airstrikes in Iran, members of Congress are calling for guardrails and greater oversight of the technology’s use in war ...
The Pentagon has been spending tens of billions of dollars to adopt new technologies at breakneck speed. Without oversight and safeguards, military applications of artificial intelligence could ...
Anduril Industries announced on Wednesday that it is acquiring ExoAnalytic Solutions, a space intelligence firm that operates a vast network of sensors monitoring the veiled movements of satellites ...
The technological change and unit economics first seen in Ukraine is on display in Iran, showing that the use of low-cost drones is the future of warfare.
The US military used Anthropic's Claude AI, but after Anthropic refused to remove guardrails against mass surveillance and autonomous weapons, the Pentagon cancelled the contract and turned to OpenAI.