BBS:      TELESC.NET.BR
Assunto:  Mass surveillance already
De:       Mike Powell
Data:     Sat, 4 Apr 2026 08:35:18 -0500
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 * Originally in: SFSciFiRea

'Mass surveillance isnt just viable, it already happens' - AI experts warn the
threat is already here

Date:
Fri, 03 Apr 2026 14:00:00 +0000

Description:
The Anthropic and Pentagon standoff has brought AI and the military into the
headlines. Heres whats really happening.

FULL STORY
A few weeks ago, the Pentagon asked Anthropic , the company behind AI assistant
Claude , to modify an existing $200 million contract and remove two key
guardrails. These were prohibitions on using its technology for domestic mass
surveillance and fully autonomous weapons. Anthropic refused and the contract
went to OpenAI instead. 

This dispute has thrust a question most of us probably hadn't thought much
about into the spotlight: can AI actually do these things? And if so, how
worried should we be? The short answer, according to the experts I spoke to,
is that this isn't science-fiction. It's already here. But the picture is 
more complicated  and in some ways more troubling  than the killer robots we
are used to seeing on the big screen.

Mass surveillance is already happening -- "Mass surveillance
isnt just viable, it already happens," James Wilson, a Global AI Ethicist and
author of Artificial Negligence , tells me. "Technologies such as Palantir 
and CCTV have been making this possible for years. Its just down to the
individual states as to whether they choose to do it." 

The US government's PRISM program  exposed by Edward Snowden over a decade 
ago  was an early example of surveillance at a massive scale. 

"The advances in AI have simply made it easier to do this at scale," Wilson
says, "and our increasingly connected existence means there are so many more
data sources they can access, with or without people's permission." 

The recent controversy around Ring doorbell cameras and Flock licence plate
readers being used by police after the Super Bowl is just the latest example.
This matters for ordinary people, not just political dissidents. Jeff Watkins
, an AI advisor specializing in governance and security tells me this sort of
surveillance points to a pattern already visible in the UK. 

"We've seen multiple recent news articles around people being misidentified 
by supermarket facial recognition systems, with the longstanding concern that
these misidentifications can disproportionately affect women and ethnic
minorities," Watkins tells me. 

The cumulative effect is a shift in how society works. "Being subject to the
algorithmic use of surveillance technologies moves the dial towards a
'suspicion by default' society, where innocent parties, going about their
everyday lives, could have their rights trampled by AI classification,"
Watkins says.

Autonomous weapons are already here -- The same is true
of lethal autonomous weapons. "The first recorded use was by Turkey against a
Libyan target using a Kargu drone in 2021," says Wilson. Since then, the
technology has moved fast. "The advances in AI have meant that this is now
possible at a much larger swarm scale, as well as being incredibly cheap." 

But the core problem here is accuracy  and what inaccuracy means when the
stakes are life and death. "Computer vision to facially recognize people is
only 90% accurate at the best of times, and if the system uses generative AI,
it will hallucinate, because it is a feature not a bug in the technology,"
Wilson says. 

The Israeli Defence Force's AI targeting program, Lavender, which was used to
identify suspected Hamas members, has since been acknowledged to have been
wrong 10% of the time. Even the best large language models still hallucinate
at a rate of 5-10%, according to Hugging Faces Vectara benchmark leaderboard.
That ten percent may still sound small. But at the scale these systems
operate, it really isn't. 

You may think that the answer is more human oversight. But that's exactly 
what some military applications are designed to reduce. "Removing
human-in-the-loop determination of the target is therefore an ethical
minefield," Wilson says. "At a more basic level, removing human determination
from the kill chain is removing any form of human dignity." 

It also removes responsibility, Watkins says. "If nobody is there to press 
the 'fire' button, who can be held accountable in the case of a loss of life,
justified or otherwise? AI is not a legal person and cannot be held
accountable itself.

Should we be worried about Terminators? -- For
anyone who grew up watching the Terminator films, recent robot videos from
Boston Dynamics and Chinese tech firms like Xpeng probably feel uncomfortably
familiar. 

But Wilson, who has spent time with similar models, urges perspective.
"Despite all of the fancy, and very choreographed, robot videos that come out
of China and the US  they are not quite there. They still need a lot of work
to get them to a stage where they could fully autonomously interact with our
world." 

The more pressing concern, he says, isn't humanoid robots. "I am more worried
about swarms of drone autonomous weapons. This technology is already there,
and it is cheap enough that it can be built today en masse, by literally
anyone." 

But the broader warning comes from Watkins, and it extends well beyond the
military context. "When organizations and governments hand off too much
decision-making to flawed and immature systems that are not fully understood
or explainable, without robust auditing, it can erode human rights and muddy
the waters of accountability." 

The Anthropic standoff was less about one company's contract and more about a
question we're all going to have to answer across the board: who decides how
much we trust these systems  and who's accountable when they're wrong?

Link to news story:
https://www.techradar.com/ai-platforms-assistants/mass-surveillance-isnt-just-
viable-it-already-happens-ai-experts-warn-the-threat-is-already-here

$$
--- SBBSecho 3.28-Linux
 * Origin: Capitol City Online (1:2320/107)

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