• PugJesus@piefed.social
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    21 天前

    At first I thought they meant literal hornets and thought this was the total mental breakdown of a Russian soldier.

  • UnspecificGravity@piefed.social
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    21 天前

    Not sure how real this post is, but if not its only a matter of time before un-jammable independent drones are doing shit like this all over the place.

  • mindbleach@sh.itjust.works
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    21 天前

    Putting aside how absolutely terrifying this will be when it’s not the good guys blowing up an invading army - I’m surprised there’s no directional filtering solution, for radio waves. You have a pretty good idea which direction adversarial signals will come from.

    Alternately, given sudden overwhelming signal strength, the drone could fly toward the source with malicious intent.

    • Hacksaw@lemmy.ca
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      21 天前

      Home on jam is classic missile technology. Ukraine should put it in their drones!

  • teyrnon@sh.itjust.works
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    21 天前

    I thought autonomous killbots were still not used (officially,) outside like Israel. There is some agreement not to go full autonomous, not sure the signatories. Anyone have any confirmation on this?

    • testaccount372920@piefed.zip
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      21 天前

      They’re saying two different things in the post. One is that a drone is flown to a location and then automatically attacks whatever it encounters, that’s fully automatic and would be aweful imo because then the drone is making decisions on what to attack/kill.

      The second thing is later in the post when they talk about countermeasures. They state that the drones can be countered before they’re locked on to a target. That implies that an operator picks a target and the automation part only serves to keep the drone locked on the target, but the drone makes no decision on what to target. That’s conceptually similar to a pilot selection an enemy aircraft they locked onto before firing a missile.

      From the post it’s not quit clear which of the two are the case or if both are happening. I suspect it’s the second case because Ukraine can’t really afford the bad publicity of the first case imo.

      • teyrnon@sh.itjust.works
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        21 天前

        It’s true, locking onto a target is no different than a guided missile. The Russian blogger is trying to make it sound like it’s autonomous killbots, when it’s guided munitions that are set on a target, by people, to avoid jamming.

      • esc@piefed.social
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        21 天前

        Local onboard ‘AI’ is used for image recognition, classification and target locking usually, and it flies using essentially agrodrone software missions (ardupilot). It’s not completely autonomous, just mostly hands off.

        • mindbleach@sh.itjust.works
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          21 天前

          It does sound like someone clicks the right blob onscreen, so in the absence of further instruction, the drone will go give it a hug. That’s missile lock-on via webcam, not a flying landmine.