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“Fear AI!” – “ warns Elon Musk back in 2014, joining other opinion leaders like Steve Wozniak, Noam Chomsky and Stephen Hawking in backing a petition against the development of autonomous weapons. As Vladimir Putin stated in 2017, “Whoever leads in AI, rules the world.”
Since the invasion of Ukraine, many things that seemed like science fiction have become reality. In March 2022, a Russian kamikaze drone controlled by artificial intelligence, known as a ZALA KYP was shot down in Kiev. In response, the US supplies their own models to Ukraine. Private firms donate satellite internet and AI-surveillance software that can track corpses and looters. Russia threatens to hit the UK with an autonomous nuclear torpedo, while China watches carefully from the sidelines and emerging high-tech powers like Turkey strike deals with both sides. The AI arms race that experts had warned about for years is now real. It will not only shape the wars of the future but is also transforming the way we think about security at the “homefront”, with police and private security forces are hungry for new tech.
AI promises superiority in all weapon categories, higher efficiency and a dramatic increase of operational speed. So dramatic, in fact, that observers fear that AI-driven conflicts could escalate so quickly, that human actors will not be able to react in time. They point to scenarios from the financial markets where so called “Flash Crashes” – triggered by competing algorithms – have become frequent, but remain little understood. They see a real danger of humanity losing control over its war-machines.
‘Flash Wars’ dives into the disturbing world of autonomous weapons. We explore why it’s so hard to teach morality to an AI and think about ways that autonomous weapons could make future wars more humane. And we follower ex-hacker Alberto Pelliccione into a secret world of spy software, military contractors and cyberweapons sold by European companies to authoritarian regimes. First, there was the invention of gunpowder, then the atomic bomb. Now we find ourselves at the threshold of another dramatic escalation in the field of armed conflict.
- Year2023
- Runtime94 minutes
- LanguageGerman, English, French, Italian, Russian
- CountryAustria
- GenreDocumentary
- NoteLocation Sound Recording: Julian Giacomuzzi, Additional Camera: Friedrich Vaders, Jonathan Vaders, Daniel Andrew Wunderer, Additional Sound Recording: Mathias Edelmann, Assistant Editor: Sophia Moser, Johannes Rass, Video Post-Production: Viennafx Postproduction, Colorist: Jacob Jabornig
- DirectorDaniel Andrew Wunderer
- ScreenwriterDaniel Andrew Wunderer
- ProducerFriedrich Moser
- CastOberst Dr. Markus Reisner, AJung Moon, Albert Pelliccione
- CinematographerTamara Diepold
- EditorMax Kliewer
- AnimatorSebastian Blatter, Felix Pichler, Christoph Steiner
- ComposerThomas Kathriner, Christoph Stock
- Sound DesignKlaus Gartner, Alex Siegel
“Fear AI!” – “ warns Elon Musk back in 2014, joining other opinion leaders like Steve Wozniak, Noam Chomsky and Stephen Hawking in backing a petition against the development of autonomous weapons. As Vladimir Putin stated in 2017, “Whoever leads in AI, rules the world.”
Since the invasion of Ukraine, many things that seemed like science fiction have become reality. In March 2022, a Russian kamikaze drone controlled by artificial intelligence, known as a ZALA KYP was shot down in Kiev. In response, the US supplies their own models to Ukraine. Private firms donate satellite internet and AI-surveillance software that can track corpses and looters. Russia threatens to hit the UK with an autonomous nuclear torpedo, while China watches carefully from the sidelines and emerging high-tech powers like Turkey strike deals with both sides. The AI arms race that experts had warned about for years is now real. It will not only shape the wars of the future but is also transforming the way we think about security at the “homefront”, with police and private security forces are hungry for new tech.
AI promises superiority in all weapon categories, higher efficiency and a dramatic increase of operational speed. So dramatic, in fact, that observers fear that AI-driven conflicts could escalate so quickly, that human actors will not be able to react in time. They point to scenarios from the financial markets where so called “Flash Crashes” – triggered by competing algorithms – have become frequent, but remain little understood. They see a real danger of humanity losing control over its war-machines.
‘Flash Wars’ dives into the disturbing world of autonomous weapons. We explore why it’s so hard to teach morality to an AI and think about ways that autonomous weapons could make future wars more humane. And we follower ex-hacker Alberto Pelliccione into a secret world of spy software, military contractors and cyberweapons sold by European companies to authoritarian regimes. First, there was the invention of gunpowder, then the atomic bomb. Now we find ourselves at the threshold of another dramatic escalation in the field of armed conflict.
- Year2023
- Runtime94 minutes
- LanguageGerman, English, French, Italian, Russian
- CountryAustria
- GenreDocumentary
- NoteLocation Sound Recording: Julian Giacomuzzi, Additional Camera: Friedrich Vaders, Jonathan Vaders, Daniel Andrew Wunderer, Additional Sound Recording: Mathias Edelmann, Assistant Editor: Sophia Moser, Johannes Rass, Video Post-Production: Viennafx Postproduction, Colorist: Jacob Jabornig
- DirectorDaniel Andrew Wunderer
- ScreenwriterDaniel Andrew Wunderer
- ProducerFriedrich Moser
- CastOberst Dr. Markus Reisner, AJung Moon, Albert Pelliccione
- CinematographerTamara Diepold
- EditorMax Kliewer
- AnimatorSebastian Blatter, Felix Pichler, Christoph Steiner
- ComposerThomas Kathriner, Christoph Stock
- Sound DesignKlaus Gartner, Alex Siegel