Drone swarms use cutting-edge technology derived from studying bird flocks and fish shoals to coordinate their movements across a potentially vast area.
Advertisement"Autonomous, armed drone swarms should have restrictions on their use, especially drone swarms targeting humans.
Ochmanek stressed that targeting decisions for drone swarms should still be made by humans, with AI only synthesizing the data.
AdvertisementCountering the swarmsAs well as developing plans to deploy drone swarms, defense companies are working on a playbook for countering them.
Another possibility, said Ochmanek, is that drone swarms could be programmed to target other drone swarms.
Persons:
—, Zak Kallenborn, David Ochmanek, Ochmanek
Organizations:
Service, RAND Corporation, Business, Center for Strategic, International Studies, Iraq, United Nations
Locations:
China, US, Israel, Europe, Ukraine