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Xavier Moss's avatar

I had got halfway through the Kill Chain a couple years back, and decided to pick it up again after the war in Ukraine started. It's fascinating just how much it seems to be written in a different world. Obviously the goal of the book was to jolt the US establishment out of complacency, so it presented some best-case scenarios for the Russian and Chinese militaries, but man comparing the Russian Army of that book to the one we saw in real life is extraordinary. A good reminder of how little we often know about others' capabilities, or our own as well - and how the error could really go in either direction.

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Earth's avatar

"To me, this debate shows just how difficult it is to assess national leadership and capabilities in AI — really, the technology is just too new to make that kind of judgement. We don’t really know exactly how AI will be used on the battlefield of a future war, and thus we don’t know which measurements of AI capabilities are most important for assessing national power."

The fact that the U.S. government has let Taiwan, a small island nation of twenty four million people off the coast of China, a hostile power of 1.4 billion people, become the world's epicenter of microchip technology is shameful and a national security risk. We see the military risks of letting microchips be beholden to foreign powers, see Russia's desperate attempts to reclaim microchips from appliances to build military weapons systems in light of the sanctions, as a strategic risk.

All current AI or ML technologies are running on specialized microchips in the form of GPUs, of which the preponderance come from Taiwan, whether NVIDIA or AMD. On-shoring the manufacture of these designs, be it in Intel fabs in Arizona or the proposed fab in Ohio, should be of primary concern. The fact that the U.S. is spending $858,000,000,000 in the latest military budget yet is unconcerned about the sourcing of these processors is disheartening at best.

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