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The US Department of Defense (DoD) is worried that artificial intelligence programs might have serious and unknown vulnerabilities that adversaries could exploit.

In particular, the Pentagon is worried that the technology could not only be hacked, but could be “spoofed”. That is, it could be intentionally deceived into thinking that it sees objects – or military targets – that do not exist. The opposite is true as well: military targets could be erroneously ignored.

That is one reason the US Air Force (USAF) and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology founded the “MIT-Air Force AI Accelerator” in 2019. The accelerator, funded with $15 million per year from the service, is looking for vulnerabilities in artificial intelligence and ways to harden the technology against enemy manipulation, said Will Roper, assistant secretary of the USAF for acquisition, technology and logistics, in June.

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