Cory Ondrejka
War Secretary Pete Hegseth put it plainly in his recent memo on military AI transformation: “speed wins.” In an era of unprecedented technological acceleration and multi-polar risk, the winners must create a truly “AI-first military”. And that requires overcoming challenges unique to delivering AI to military commanders and warfighters.
The science-fiction nature of current and emerging AI capabilities is already our reality. State actors are already using frontier models for complex cyber espionage. Even in the last year, it was widely assumed that AI-driven development of large, complex projects like web browsers was years away. But several teams did this last week. Days ago, the small open-source project OpenClaw enabled millions of AI agents to collaboratively navigate vast amounts of personal data.
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