Tag Archives: artificial intelligence and drones

AI or Just Bots: the Truth about Artificial Intelligence

Americans are becoming increasingly convinced that artificial intelligence is actually thinking like humans do…This fuels narratives about a future in which AI takes over the economy, leading to heightened insecurity for all of us while providing cover for companies that might be laying off workers for other reasons. It leads us to accept as true answers that are frequently made up or incorrect, even when we are repeatedly told that chatbots can’t stop delivering this kind of misinformation…Our cognitive biases developed to help us survive in complex social environments… We have evolved to view linguistic fluency as a proxy for intelligence, and engagement and helpfulness as indicators of trustworthiness. Builders of AI tools lean in to this deliberately. The humanlike qualities of chatbots are a calculated effort by designers and engineers to make AI more useful, but also more compelling and stickier [i.e. addictive]—just like social media.

Microsoft AI chief Mustafa Suleyman… warned that today’s seemingly conscious AIs [consists of a bunch of] highly accelerated information processors. “These systems are not waking up,” he wrote. “They are retracing and mirroring the contours of human drama and debate, as documented in their vast training data.” He recommends a solution: “Developers must actively engineer the illusion of consciousness out of the products.”…

Humans have a tendency to anthropomorphize animals and even inanimate objects, says Ayanna Howard, dean of Ohio State University’s College of Engineering and a robotics….Humans’ trusting nature makes sense for social creatures who must cooperate with members of their own tribe to survive. With AI and robots, however, this same tendency leads us to trust any system that appears to listen, understand and want to help, a phenomenon Howard calls “over-trust.” Today’s AIs are engineered to actively induce us to over-trust them, she adds. They do this by behaving in ways that are friendly and helpful, mimicking us through memory and personalization.

Excerpt from Christopher Mims, Why Even Smart People Believe AI Is Really Thinking, WSJ, Mar. 20, 2026

When Artificial Intelligence Goes to War

Anthropic scored a major endorsement in the summer of 2025 when it won a contract worth up to $200 million from the United States Defense Department. Now, the AI startup’s relationship with the Pentagon is on the rocks…According to Anthropic’s terms and condition Claude can’t be used for any actions related to domestic surveillance. That limits how many law-enforcement agencies such as Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) could deploy it. Anthropic’s focus on safe applications of AI—and its objection to having its technology used in autonomous lethal operations (e.g., drones)—have continued to cause problems…

Other AI companies including OpenAI and Google are also working with the military.

Excerpt from Keach Hagey, Anthropic-Pentagon Clash Over Limits on AI Puts $200 Million Contract at Risk, WSJ, Jan. 29, 2026