AI At War
Kyiv, Ukraine — The desire to create a regulatory sandbox that takes into account the future “Artificial Intelligence Act” (draft law to regulate the development, diffusion, and use of applications that exploit artificial intelligence, proposed two years ago by the EU Commission) highlights the intention of the Ukrainian government to take a further step towards European integration. Indicating the key role played by AI both in war and in public services, Deputy Prime Minister Mikhailo Fedorov highlighted some fundamental questions regarding its regulation, which had already emerged during the international forum “Artificial Intelligence 2.0: Regulatory and Work in Time of War “, recently held in May in Kyiv.
The large investments made even before the war allowed Ukraine to immediately interact with the intelligence tools used by the Atlantic Alliance and to develop innovative solutions independently.
Adaptive self-learning processes similar to those used by the “Cerego” platform are used to define the behavioral algorithms of marine, aerial, and terrestrial drones, reducing latencies and downtime of entire combat, rescue, and patrolling fleets active 24 hours a day to a minimum. Used in simulations, these economical and unmanned vehicles can very quickly process volumes of information that are unmanageable by humans, reducing training time and allowing the refinement of innovative techniques based on machine learning.