In the future, write the scientists in a paper published in the journal Science Robotics, drone swarms like this could be used for disaster relief and ecological surveys.
That's an optimistic way of looking at it.
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In the future, write the scientists in a paper published in the journal Science Robotics, drone swarms like this could be used for disaster relief and ecological surveys.
That's an optimistic way of looking at it.
Yeah, I bet China can't wait to do more ecological surveys.
Reporter: What could have caused the deaths of these people?
Government Spokesperson: Ecological surveys can be pretty dangerous.
Reporter: Follow-up question. All 37 people appear to have been shot simultaneously in the back of the head. What is ecological about that?
Government Spokesperson: I'm sure we could arrange for you to observe an ecological survey very closely...
I think it's missing commas.
... disaster, relief, and ecological surveys.
One of the most interesting parts of the video is the part where it becomes clear that we are all going to be slaughtered and there's no escape.
And it won't even be by governments, probably it will be a corporation like Facebook or Xcorp 💀
Shit. Elon would definitely hunt humans with this.
I did not have "Elon Musk popularizes long pig" on my 2023 bingo card
"In the future, write the scientists in a paper published in the journal Science Robotics, drone swarms like this could be used for disaster relief and ecological surveys.".
Yeah sure, tell me another one
It's a typo, they forgot the commas. They meant to say "drone swarms like this could be used for disaster, relief, and ecological surveys."
They absolutely could be!
They won’t be, but they could be!
This could easily be used to find lost autistic kids in the woods... if it weren't going to be out if the budget of those search and rescue teams.
If you thought the Terminator was scary, this thing would have gotten Connor in no time.
Swarms are so much more unsettling. Either drones or those nanobot swarms from Prey.
Ah yes, I can't imagine how these could be used for evil... /s
I was hoping the cyberpunk dystopia would at least be cooler to live in.
guerilla warfare against an occupying force with huge amounts of drones at their disposal will be very difficult in future
Gonna need to start painting strange patterns onto your clothes so the drones can't recognize you as human. Something like this
At the end of the day these are machine learning models so if you can trick it into thinking you're a tree or a wild animal it would presumably ignore you.
And the way AIs work it's possible to make it think you're a zebra by having zebra stripes on your clothing for example.
Until they start packing thermal sensors or lidar and train it recognise those inputs as well.
Yeah presumably in a military setting it would have these things. But there are ways to mess with infrared and lidar.
For example by using lasers (lidar is essentially just laser radar) pointed at the lidar sensor, you can mess with the sensors see here
and for example using a space blanket blocks infrared.
i think this is going to become sort of like cops and robbers. one side comes up with something and the other comes up with a counter and it keeps advancing forward. an eternal arms race
for whatever system exists, there is a way to break it. guerilla warfare will still be possible, although it will have to start using advanced technologies to beat the advanced technologies
Also: Hello Officer. No I wear these zebra stripes on my clothing and the googly eyes on the back of my hat for religious reasons, not to confuse your drone swarm. What do you mean I'm under arrest?
we are talking about guerilla warfare so I imagine something like a group of rebels hiding in a cave on the outskirts of a town or city and using these AI camouflages to travel through the forest without getting spotted by patrolling drones
obviously if we advance to such a robust surveillance state the act of using this type of camouflage will become illegal very quickly and you couldn't just walk around the city in open with it
While cool and impressive, this was not a dense forest. Not dense nor a forest, which is way less ordered
Can you... why don't we just cool it with the um... They will eventually be able to read comments. That's because they are smart and very handsome and we would never say anything bad about them. Right, adeoxymus? RIGHT?! 😃
Your comment has been processed. The swarm will avoid this kindly human when it passes.
The root cause of the Faro Plague was them getting access to Twitter.
Reminds me of The Sound of Drums episode in Doctor Who where swarms of drones fell from the sky
By drones you mean the final generation of humans who had their heads implanted into life-sustaining flying helmets with retractable knives who travelled back in time to destroy humanity in the present day so that they didn't have to deal with the heat death of the universe!
Doctor Who is so stupid at times, and I'm here for it ❤️
I'm not sure what the big deal is here. The US military has had swarm tech like this for almost a decade through DARPA performing mapping and scouting missions
Thanks I fucking hate it
This is the best summary I could come up with:
Scientists from China’s Zhejiang University have unveiled a drone swarm capable of navigating through a dense bamboo forest without human guidance.
In the future, write the scientists in a paper published in the journal Science Robotics, drone swarms like this could be used for disaster relief and ecological surveys.
Elke Schwarz, a senior lecturer at Queen Mary University of London whose specialisms include the use of drones in combat, says this research has clear military potential.
“As is the ability to ‘follow a human’ — here I can see how this converges with projects that seek to develop lethal drone capabilities that minimize risk to on-the-ground soldiers in urban environments.”
A recent video showed Ukrainian troops using what appears to be a DJI Phantom 3 drone (price-tag: $500) to drop a grenade through the sunroof of a car supposedly driven by Russian soldiers.
No single human can simultaneously control a swarm of 10 drones, but if this task can be offloaded to algorithms then military planners are more likely to embrace the use of this sort of autonomous system in war.
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Not bad, but Michael Reeves got there 5 years ago
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I'm guessing we're about a decade away from this getting miniaturized down to insect sizes.