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Pentagon is Using Artificial Intelligence to Predict the Future and Provide ‘Days of Advanced Warning’ of an Attack

Article by Dan Avery                                                     August 2, 2021                                                                   (dailymail.co.uk)

• The Pentagon is experimenting with an artificial-intelligence program that can look ‘days in advance’ and predict possible attacks on vulnerable locations. The Global Information Dominance Experiments, or GIDE, uses machine learning to sift through vast amounts of data to notice tiny changes that humans might miss – such as the number of cars increasing or decreasing in a parking lot – which might indicate an evolving threat. The program can then alert human agents who can take a closer look.

• GIDE spurs faster decisions and provides proactive options by making new technologies more accessible and more effective, says General Glen VanHerck, commander of the US Northern Command. GIDE combines artificial intelligence and cloud computing resources with data from sources around the world to ‘achieve information dominance’ and ‘decision-making superiority.”

• The latest experiment – ‘GIDE 3’ – focused on ‘contested logistics’ in a scenario where lines of communication in the Panama Canal were compromised, military officials said. It was conducted in conjunction with all 11 US combatant commands ‘collaborating in the same information space using the same exact capabilities’, said VanHerck. The new system represents a “leap forward in our ability to maintain domain awareness, achieve information dominance, and provide decision superiority in competition and crisis”.

• Currently, VanHerck said, the agency is usually in a ‘reactive environment,’ responding to rival nation’s actions. ‘We can set parameters where it will trip an alert to give you the awareness to go take another sensor such as GEOINT on-satellite capability to take a closer look at what might be ongoing in a specific location. What we’ve seen is the ability to get way further what I call left of being reactive to actually being proactive,” said VanHerck. “And I’m talking not minutes and hours, I’m talking days.”

• Established in 1958 at the height of the Cold War, the US Northern Command is responsible for defending North America primarily from air attacks (via NORAD) and providing maritime warning. The extra time offered by GIDE creates ‘decision space’ for military brass to develop various deterrence strategies to present to Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin and president-for-now Biden. The US Air Force and Army are also leveraging AI to predict conflict scenarios.

• GIDE 3 also includes support from the Joint Artificial Intelligence Center and Project Maven, a DoD sub-group that uses AI to sift through massive amounts ‘of persistent surveillance imagery’ to quickly identify useful intel. “What we’re doing is making that data available and shared into a cloud where machine learning and artificial intelligence look at it,” VanHerck said. “They process it really quickly and provide it to decision-makers… This gives us days of advanced warning and ability to react.”

 

The Pentagon is stealing a page from Minority Report with an experimental artificial-

                General Glen VanHerck

intelligence program that can look ‘days in advance’ and predict possible attacks on vulnerable locations.

The Global Information Dominance Experiments, or GIDE, use machine learning to sift through vast amounts of data to notice tiny changes that humans might miss – such as the number of cars increasing or decreasing in a parking lot – which might indicate an evolving threat.

The program can then alert human agents who can take a closer look at the location.

The latest experiment – GIDE 3 – focused on ‘contested logistics’, in a scenario where lines of communication in the Panama Canal were compromised, military officials said.

General Glen VanHerck, commander of the US Northern Command (NORTHCOM), said GIDE combines artificial intelligence and cloud computing resources with data from sources around the world to ‘achieve information dominance’ and ‘decision-making superiority.’

Completed earlier this month, the third test of GIDE was conducted in conjunction with all 11 US combatant commands ‘collaborating in the same information space using the same exact capabilities’, he told a press conference.

The new system represents a ‘leap forward in our ability to maintain domain awareness, achieve information dominance, and provide decision superiority in competition and crisis,’ he said.

‘GIDE spurs faster decisions and provides proactive options by making new technologies more accessible and more effective.’

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Artificial Intelligence, General Glen VanHerck, GIDE, Joint Artificial Intelligence Center, NORAD, Project Maven, The Global Information Dominance Experiments, US Northern Command


ExoNews Editor

Duke Brickhouse is a former trial lawyer and entertainment attorney who has refocused his life’s work to exposing the truth of our subjugated planet and to help raise humanity’s collective consciousness at this crucial moment in our planet’s history, in order to break out of the dark and negative false reality that is preventing the natural development of our species, to put our planet on a path of love, light and harmony in preparation for our species’ ascension to a fourth density, and to ultimately take our rightful place in the galactic community.

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