tech
January 25, 2026
Kina razvija dronove i oružje uz pomoć AI oslanjajući se na prirodu i životinje
Inženjeri sa Univerziteta Bejhang u Pekingu, jednog od vodećih kineskih univerziteta povezanih sa vojskom, razvili su nove modele borbene upotrebe dronova oslanjajući se na veštačku inteligenciju i obrasce ponašanja iz prirode, odnosno na životinje, pokazuje istraživanje u koje je Volstrit džurnal (WSJ) imao uvid.

TL;DR
- Chinese engineers are developing AI-powered drone combat strategies based on animal behavior.
- Defensive drones trained like 'hawks' identify and destroy vulnerable enemy aircraft.
- Offensive drones programmed like 'pigeons' evade attacks.
- A five-on-five simulation showed 'hawk' drones destroying 'pigeon' drones in 5.3 seconds.
- The research is part of China's push for 'swarm intelligence' using AI.
- China's PLA is actively developing drone swarms, robotic dogs, and other autonomous systems.
- Military procurement tenders include requests for AI-driven 'deepfake' video systems and sonic weapons.
- Chinese military theorists believe future wars will be 'algorithm-driven'.
- China's advantage lies in its large industrial base capable of producing over a million cheap drones annually.
- China has showcased systems like 'Swarm 1' and the 'Jiutian' mother drone.
- Experiments involve linking air swarms with armed robotic vehicles like 'robot wolves'.
- Reliance on autonomous systems may stem from concerns about Chinese officers' limited combat experience.
- AI in warfare carries risks, including technical failures and systems making lethal decisions without human control.
- Analysts warn of the 'black box' problem of algorithms and accountability for errors.