AI-Powered Drone Swarms Have Now Entered the Battlefield (msn.com)
(Tuesday September 02, 2025 @11:30PM (BeauHD)
from the modern-warfare dept.)
- Reference: 0178983410
- News link: https://tech.slashdot.org/story/25/09/02/2139235/ai-powered-drone-swarms-have-now-entered-the-battlefield
- Source link: https://www.msn.com/en-us/lifestyle/shopping/ai-powered-drone-swarms-have-now-entered-the-battlefield/ar-AA1LHwJg
An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Wall Street Journal:
> On a recent evening, a trio of Ukrainian drones flew under the cover of darkness to a Russian position and decided among themselves exactly when to strike. The assault was an example of how Ukraine is [1]using artificial intelligence to allow groups of drones to coordinate with each other to attack Russian positions , an innovative technology that heralds the future of battle. Military experts say the so-called swarm technology represents the next frontier for drone warfare because of its potential to allow tens or even thousands of drones -- or swarms -- to be deployed at once to overwhelm the defenses of a target, be that a city or an individual military asset.
>
> Ukraine has conducted swarm attacks on the battlefield for much of the past year, according to a senior Ukrainian officer and the company that makes the software. The previously unreported attacks are the first known routine use of swarm technology in combat, analysts say, underscoring Ukraine's position at the vanguard of drone warfare. [...] The drones deployed in the recent Ukrainian attack used technology developed by local company Swarmer. Its software allows groups of drones to decide which one strikes first and adapt if, for instance, one runs out of battery, said Chief Executive Serhii Kupriienko. "You set the target and the drones do the rest," Kupriienko said. "They work together, they adapt."
>
> Swarmer's technology was first deployed by Ukrainian forces to lay mines around a year ago. It has since been used to target Russian soldiers, equipment and infrastructure, according to the Ukrainian military officer. The officer said his drone unit had used Swarmer's technology more than a hundred times, and that other units also have UAVs equipped with the software. He typically uses the technology with three drones, but says others have deployed it with as many as eight. Kupriienko said the software has been tested with up to 25 drones. A common operation uses a reconnaissance drone and two other UAVs carrying small bombs to target a Russian trench, the officer said. An operator gives the drones a target zone to look for an enemy position and the command to engage when it is spotted. The reconnaissance drone maps the route for the bombers to follow and the drones themselves then decide when, and which one, will release the bombs over the target.
[1] https://www.msn.com/en-us/lifestyle/shopping/ai-powered-drone-swarms-have-now-entered-the-battlefield/ar-AA1LHwJg
> On a recent evening, a trio of Ukrainian drones flew under the cover of darkness to a Russian position and decided among themselves exactly when to strike. The assault was an example of how Ukraine is [1]using artificial intelligence to allow groups of drones to coordinate with each other to attack Russian positions , an innovative technology that heralds the future of battle. Military experts say the so-called swarm technology represents the next frontier for drone warfare because of its potential to allow tens or even thousands of drones -- or swarms -- to be deployed at once to overwhelm the defenses of a target, be that a city or an individual military asset.
>
> Ukraine has conducted swarm attacks on the battlefield for much of the past year, according to a senior Ukrainian officer and the company that makes the software. The previously unreported attacks are the first known routine use of swarm technology in combat, analysts say, underscoring Ukraine's position at the vanguard of drone warfare. [...] The drones deployed in the recent Ukrainian attack used technology developed by local company Swarmer. Its software allows groups of drones to decide which one strikes first and adapt if, for instance, one runs out of battery, said Chief Executive Serhii Kupriienko. "You set the target and the drones do the rest," Kupriienko said. "They work together, they adapt."
>
> Swarmer's technology was first deployed by Ukrainian forces to lay mines around a year ago. It has since been used to target Russian soldiers, equipment and infrastructure, according to the Ukrainian military officer. The officer said his drone unit had used Swarmer's technology more than a hundred times, and that other units also have UAVs equipped with the software. He typically uses the technology with three drones, but says others have deployed it with as many as eight. Kupriienko said the software has been tested with up to 25 drones. A common operation uses a reconnaissance drone and two other UAVs carrying small bombs to target a Russian trench, the officer said. An operator gives the drones a target zone to look for an enemy position and the command to engage when it is spotted. The reconnaissance drone maps the route for the bombers to follow and the drones themselves then decide when, and which one, will release the bombs over the target.
[1] https://www.msn.com/en-us/lifestyle/shopping/ai-powered-drone-swarms-have-now-entered-the-battlefield/ar-AA1LHwJg
War profiteering .. (Score:2)
by Mirnotoriety ( 10462951 )
War profiteering .. who is making big war bucks out of this war?
Great news (Score:2)
Maybe we can finally designate a war fighting location, like the Gobi desert, and send all leaders who want to fight wars, from putin and netanyahu to trump and their drone armies there and have them fight it out?
And then just imprison whoever survives for drone crimes?
Re: Great news (Score:1)
What if AI makes war a hallucination, sending messages that violence has been done so that the generals are satisfied, but it's all just a reverse Ender's Game?
Re: (Score:2)
We've had this since 1990 - it was called "Civilization", IIRC. We just have to plug it into the sensory inputs of the culprits.
Re: (Score:2)
In every war there is bad guy. Sometimes there is a good guy, but often there are two bad guys. Netanyahu is a bad guy, but so are the Hamas.
The bad guys ALWAYS claim to be the good guy. Right now, they do not bother to make good arguments, but if they had a system anything close to yours, their arguments would be better.
Your method ends up killing the good guys when they do exist.
It would also end up killing idiots that fell for bad arguments (George Bush comes to mind).
Re: (Score:2)
> Your method ends up killing the good guys
How?