John Wiley & Sons Artificial Intelligence, Cybersecurity and Cyber Defence Cover The aim of the book is to analyse and understand the impacts of artificial intelligence in the field.. Product #: 978-1-78630-467-4 Regular price: $157.94 $157.94 In Stock

Artificial Intelligence, Cybersecurity and Cyber Defence

Ventre, Daniel

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1. Edition December 2020
272 Pages, Hardcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd

ISBN: 978-1-78630-467-4
John Wiley & Sons

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The aim of the book is to analyse and understand the impacts of artificial intelligence in the fields of national security and defense; to identify the political, geopolitical, strategic issues of AI; to analyse its place in conflicts and cyberconflicts, and more generally in the various forms of violence; to explain the appropriation of artificial intelligence by military organizations, but also law enforcement agencies and the police; to discuss the questions that the development of artificial intelligence and its use raise in armies, police, intelligence agencies, at the tactical, operational and strategic levels.

Introduction ix

Chapter 1. On the Origins of Artificial Intelligence 1

1.1. The birth of artificial intelligence (AI) 1

1.1.1. The 1950s-1970s in the United States 1

1.1.2. AI research in China 7

1.1.3. AI research in Russia 9

1.1.4. AI research in Japan 12

1.1.5. AI research in France 14

1.2. Characteristics of AI research 16

1.3. The sequences of AI history 19

1.4. The robot and robotics 23

1.5. Example of AI integration: the case of the CIA in the 1980s 27

1.5.1. The CIA's instruments and methods for understanding and appropriating AI adapted to its needs 29

1.5.2. Focus groups, research, coordination 35

1.5.3. The network of interlocutors outside the intelligence community 36

1.5.4. What AI applications for what intelligence needs? 42

Chapter 2. Concepts and Discourses 45

2.1. Defining AI 47

2.1.1. AI 47

2.1.2. Expert systems 54

2.1.3. Machine learning and deep learning 56

2.1.4. The robot, robotics 57

2.2. Types of AI 60

2.3. Evolution of the themes over time 62

2.3.1. Google Trends 62

2.3.2. The AAAI magazine 63

2.4. The stories generated by artificial intelligence 67

2.4.1. The transformative power of AI 67

2.4.2. The absolute superiority of human intelligence over the machine 75

2.4.3. The replacement of humans by machines 76

2.4.4. AI as an existential threat 77

2.4.5. The place of AI and robotics in fiction: the example of Japan 80

2.5. Political considerations 82

2.5.1. National strategies for artificial intelligence 85

2.5.2. U.S. policy 97

Chapter 3. Artificial Intelligence and Defense Issues 105

3.1. Military policies and doctrines for AI: the American approach 105

3.1.1. American defense AI policy 105

3.1.2. AI in American military doctrines 114

3.2. Military AI in Russia 128

3.3. AI and the art of warfare 136

3.3.1. Manuel de Landa: war in the age of intelligent machines 136

3.3.2. AI announcing a new RMA? 139

3.3.3. Applications of AI in the military field 143

3.3.4. Expert systems in military affairs 146

3.3.5. Autonomous weapons 148

3.3.6. Robotics and AI 151

3.4. AI and cyber conflict 155

3.4.1. Malware, cybersecurity and AI 157

3.4.2. AI and cyberweapons 162

3.4.3. Offensive-defensive/security configurations 163

3.4.4. Adversarial AI and adversarial Machine Learning 171

3.4.5. AI and information warfare 173

3.4.6. Example 1: the war in Syria 179

3.4.7. Example 2: events in Hong Kong in 2019 181

3.4.8. Example 3: malicious AI attacks 183

3.4.9. Example 4: swarming attacks 184

3.4.10. Example 5: crossing universes with AI and without AI 185

Conclusion 187

Appendices 195

Appendix 1. A Chronology of AI 197

Appendix 2. AI in Joint Publications (Department of Defense, United States) 207

Appendix 3. AI in the Guidelines and Instructions of the Department of Defense (United States) 209

Appendix 4. AI in U.S. Navy Instructions 211

Appendix 5. AI in U.S. Marine Corps Documents 213

Appendix 6. AI in U.S. Air Force Documents 215

References 217

Index 235
Daniel Ventre: Researcher at CESDIP Laboratory (CNRS/University of Versailles/Ministry of Justice/University of Cergy Pontoise)