Hegseth, Philippine President Meet to Advance Deterrence in Indo-Pacific - U.S. Department of Defens
Hegseth, Philippine President Meet to Advance Deterrence in Indo-Pacific - U.S. Department of Defense (.gov)

Hegseth, Philippine President Meet to Advance Deterrence in Indo-Pacific – U.S. Department of Defense (.gov)

How did your country report this? Share your view in the comments.

Diverging Reports Breakdown

Today in DoD

Senate Committee on Armed Services hearing to examine the nominations of Vice Adm. Frank M. Bradley to be admiral and commander, U.S. Special Operations Command; and Lt. Gen. Dagvin R.M. Anderson to be general and commander of U.s. Africa Command.

Read full article ▼
Open Press Events

The vice chairman has no public or media events on his schedule.

The vice chairman has no public or media events on his schedule.

The chairman has no public or media events on his schedule.

The chairman has no public or media events on his schedule.

The deputy secretary has no public or media events on his schedule.

The deputy secretary has no public or media events on his schedule.

The secretary has no public or media events on his schedule.

The secretary has no public or media events on his schedule.

Senate Committee on Armed Services hearing to examine the nominations of Vice Adm. Frank M. Bradley to be admiral and commander, U.S. Special Operations Command; and Lt. Gen. Dagvin R.M. Anderson to be general and commander, U.S. Africa Command, at 9:30 a.m., SD-G50 Dirksen Senate Office Building, Washington, D.C.

Source: Defense.gov | View original article

DOD Partners With Agencies to Use AI for Disaster, Humanitarian Relief

The Defense Department is partnering with other agencies to develop deep-learning artificial intelligence algorithms. The goal is to provide near-real-time data to improve the decision-making of first responders engaged in natural disasters and humanitarian assistance efforts. Representatives from DOD and its partners — the Energy Department and Microsoft — along with a White House official, spoke yesterday during a virtual meeting. The White House deputy chief of staff said the administration is excited about government and private partners using AI to save lives.

Read full article ▼
The Defense Department is partnering with other agencies to develop deep-learning artificial intelligence algorithms to provide near-real-time data to improve the decision-making of first responders engaged in natural disasters and humanitarian assistance efforts.

Representatives from DOD and its partners — the Energy Department and Microsoft — along with a White House official, spoke yesterday during a virtual meeting.

Michael J. Kratsios, DOD’s chief technology officer, said five consortiums have been launched to accomplish this goal, using the best AI technology talent from industry to respond to humanitarian assistance and to mitigate natural disasters by protecting property and lives, including those of first responders.

Cheryl Ingstad, director of the Energy Department’s AI and technology office, said one of the most important aspects of this work is understanding first responders’ needs and developing AI in such a way that they can easily understand and use it. She said she’s confident the work will save lives and that additional partners may be added to the effort.

Nand Mulchandani, acting director of the Defense Department’s Joint Artificial Intelligence Center, said DOD is working on this collaborative project because the department devotes significant time and manpower to responding to disasters and humanitarian assistance relief operations, and this work can contribute to that effort in a big way.

Research and development, he said, has been progressing for about a year, and it has progressed from being a concept to become something that can be used. “Software has unique and powerful properties,” he said. “If you build it well with the right customer focus and architecture, the more you build, the cheaper it gets.”

Susie Adams, Microsoft’s chief federal technology officer, said the work not only will help first responders in the United States, but also will be shared with global partners.

“AI and machine learning enable solutions never thought possible,” she said. “AI is a tool to augment human intelligence, not replace it. It’s about getting data to the right people at the right time as quickly as possible so they can make better-informed decisions.”

Adams noted that Microsoft has been working on AI for about 25 years and now has 1,000 researchers engaged in AI work.

Chris Liddell, White House deputy chief of staff, said the administration is excited about government and private partners using AI to save lives and fully supports the effort.

Source: Defense.gov | View original article

Source: https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMi1AFBVV95cUxPbXBHbXVhVFh4d2xJSjhYdnhzU3ZiaDZNblRwMHNndGFUbG9CUGs3bmtPUGZSdUdrX1FWRFI0TE5pNl9idjN6eUVYSzQ0alZ3LU1wcDdWTHBtV3BUQXZLSVBsU1EwekFBN25KUlE3Rkc5RHVTZXB3LU4yZU96LS10V2IwdHBxNkw5U2dwTU5abkxaMm5rZ1VpVDl3dUFMNlV6b0tocTRRRTNJOG5FZFlqVUpyXzZOM3h3N3htSzZVblVzOF9xVGtuWjMwNGllQTVMV0ViZw?oc=5

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *