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Title: Elon Musk On The Future Of Warfare
Duration: 00:30:42
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we're really excited for you to help us
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kick off our our um intellectual theme
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human in the machine which is leadership
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on the emerging Battlefield how do you
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see Warfare transforming in the future I
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mean the biggest effect I think by far
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is AI and drones uh so the the next well
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in fact the current war in Ukraine uh is
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very much a drone War already uh it's
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it's sort of a contest between Russia
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trying to see who can deploy the most
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number of drones um now if there uh a
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major power War it's very much going to
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be a drone War it's it's going to be
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drones and Ai and you know it's a sort
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of I mean I do worry about the
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existential risk of AI um which is that
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if you if you employ Ai and drones do
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you do you go down this path where
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eventually you get to Terminator you
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know try to avoid that um that would be
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good that would be good yeah um minimize
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the Terminator risk but but I mean
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essentially if you are when when you're
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making military Dres you are making
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Terminators um
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and you're I think you're you'll
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somewhat be forced into the giving
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localized the Drone localized AI um
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because if the AI is far away it can't
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control as well as localized AI so what
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do you mean by localized AI meaning it's
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autonomous killing machine completely
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autonomous well you give it the okay
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yeah in a particular Arena and it's and
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it goes with certain parameters yeah
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hopefully do you think our you think
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think our adversaries will have that
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those same type of concerns or
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limitations um well yeah I mean depends
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on how much existential risk there is in
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these wars uh so if it's if it's a a
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regional War I think it'll be more
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tempered if it's goes beyond a regional
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War then it's or betol and you know and
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then you you start deploying things that
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you really wouldn't want to deploy so
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hopefully that doesn't happen but you
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would but you said and I would agree
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that if you just look at the
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contemporary conflicts that are taking
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place you would agree that machines
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aren't just disrupting Warfare they're
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now Common Place Dron drones are going
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to be
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overwhelmingly the uh what matters in in
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any in any between you know any powers
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that have uh significant technology it's
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it's so my personal belief is like that
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you really it'll actually be my I think
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probably too dangerous to have humans at
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the front it's it's drones it's drones
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at the front it's too dous don't miss
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because of The lethality though it's too
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dangerous to have humans in the front
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yes I mean I mean if you seeing some of
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the computer controled sniper rifles I
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mean they just don't miss so you're in
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the you're you're finding a machine
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that's going to you know aim with Micron
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level accuracy and uh never gets tired
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so how do you think the United States
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should be Levering technology to further
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our National Defense well I think we
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probably need to invest in drones um the
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um the United States is strong in in
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terms of Technology of the items but the
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production rate is low so it's it's a
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it's a small number of units relatively
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speaking but basically I think there's
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there's a there's a there's a production
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rate issue like theate say like how fast
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can you make drones say you say there's
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a drone conflict the outcome of that
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drone conflict will be um how many
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drones does each side have in that
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particular Skirmish times the kill ratio
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so if you've got you can have a let's
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say we would United States would have a
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drone a set of drones that have a have a
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high kill ratio uh but then uh the other
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side has far more drones if you got two
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to one kill ratio the other side has
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four times as many drones you're still
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going to lose do you think our
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industrial base can scale to make the
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volume of drones that you're you're just
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you're you're you know talking about I
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think that's that's going to be the the
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the biggest challenge that that is uh it
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can scale but it is not currently
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scaling why would that be I think the
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procurement is so I mean there we not
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read a lot of military history and and
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actually like the thing that I go to
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sleep with is using an audio book on on
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U on military history on of one kind or
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another uh so I find the subject very
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interesting um and one of the things
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that tends to happen is that uh
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countries pretty much are geared enough
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to fight the last war not the next war
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and it's it's hard to change um I you
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look at the the uh uniforms at the start
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of World War I and the tactics and
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strategies they use to start of World
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War I there were not significantly
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different from the Napoleonic era um you
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know the the I mean the French were
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marching into war with brightly colored
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uniforms look great um that's that's
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that's not what you want to be you know
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when some trying to Point again at you
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don't want a great looking uniform you
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want uniform that blends in um so
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there's a tendency to be geing after to
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fight the last war the last war the US
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for is kind of the Cold War I guess
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so uh it usually takes like some kind of
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shock factor to adjust uh I I would
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recommend adjusting now um and and
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you're are seeing some startups like and
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and a few others that are have different
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mindset um but it's really it's it's
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going to be can you make a lot of drones
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and what's kill ratio that's what it
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comes down to so there was recently a
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report that said that president zalinski
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said by February 2025 there'll be a
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million drones produced by the Ukrainian
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so it seems like it's doable and this
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might be a process question and we'll
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talk about process in a second but as
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you were as you were just talking I was
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thinking about and you said that you you
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can't have humans at the front and so
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you haven't created a company that's
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solved aging yet have you no okay so 100
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years I I wonder whether we should solve
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aging that's a great Point yeah I'd like
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to wrap it up sometimes right well it's
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like yeah how long do you went to prud
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and Kim J on to love that's a great
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Point yeah but let's say don't get
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pushed let's say you go for 50 100 years
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how do you envision this Evolution and I
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think this might get to neurolink how do
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you see this Evolution between the human
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who maybe can't be at the front any
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longer the technolog is at the front yet
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keeping them C integrated and
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synchronized like how does that how is
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that going to work in your mind I mean
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so Communications is essential like it
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is actually very important to have
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space-based communications that are it
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cannot be intercepted which is which is
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starlink what starlink offers starink is
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starlink is the backbone of the
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Ukrainian military Communication System
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um because it it can't be blocked by the
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Russians essentially it's the only thing
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they can't be so on the front lines all
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the fiber connections are cut the cell
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towers are blown up and the the
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geostationary satellite links are jammed
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the only thing that isn't jammed is slic
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it's a only thing and then GPS GPS also
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jammed
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GPS signal is very faint but stalling
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can offer location capability as well so
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it is a a strategic advantage that's
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very significant um and and when when
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you're trying to communicate with the
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drones the drones need to like basically
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they need to know where they are and and
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they need to receive instructions so if
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you don't have Communications in
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positioning then the drones don't work
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that that's that's that's quite
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important it's essential but you find it
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important that there's still that that
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communication between the human and the
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the machine or the drum yeah yes there's
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like it's a different question of like
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where are things like right now versus
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where will things be in 10 years um but
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I have to say I I do look at the future
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with sub trepidation I I have to have
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some deliberate suspens of disbelief to
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sleep sometimes um because I I think the
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we're headed into a pretty wild future
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and I'm I'm naturally an optimistic
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person so you know but but AI is going
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to be so good um including localized AI
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I mean at at current rates you'll have
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you know some of that sort of rock level
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AI probably that can be run on a drone
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and so you could literally say you know
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um this is the equipment that the Drone
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needs to destroy go into that thing
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It'll recognize what equipment needs to
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be destroyed and take it out it's a lot
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of your work with neurolink though is
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because what you're saying is that AI is
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going to quickly surpass at least in
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your estimation the the human's ability
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to control it yeah okay I mean I'd like
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to say no but the answer is yes so how
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first off how long until you think that
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happens before the the the the AI has
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has evolved to the point where and I you
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know they the AIS can start working
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together even relying on computers like
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in a de hobbled way and therefore
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surpasses the ability for the human to
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to be able to influence um how it's
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working well I think humans will be able
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to influence how it's working for a long
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time um this is an esoteric subject that
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you really goes into pretty wild
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speculation um I I think it's to to some
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degree that the AIS I think will want
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humans as a source of will uh so if you
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think of how the human mind works
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there's lumic system and the cortex your
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sort of your kind of um base instincts
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and the sort of thinking and planning
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part of your brain but you also have a
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tertiary layer already which is that all
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of the electronics that you use your
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your phones computers applications um so
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you already sort of have three layers of
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intelligence um but all of those the
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cortex and the Machine intelligence your
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sort of cybernetic third layer is trying
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to make the limic system happy because
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limic system is a source a source of
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will so there's some you know it might
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be that the AIS just want to make the
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humans
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happy um and part of what neur Link's
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trying to do is improve the
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communication bandwidth between the
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Vortex and the digital temp layer CU our
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bandwidth band output bandwidth of a
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human is less than one bit per second
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per day there 86,400 seconds in a day
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you don't outward 86,400 tokens so you
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know it's but like the the number of
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words that I can say at those Forum say
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just like just look at it from an
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information Theory standpoint how how
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much information am I able to convey not
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that much because I can only say a pure
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number of words and in order in order to
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convey an idea I have to take take a
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concept in my head I have to compress it
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down to a small number of woods try to
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aspirationally model how you would
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decompress th those woods into Concept
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in your own mind that's communication so
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your brain is doing a lot of compression
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decompression and and and then has a
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very small output bandwidth neuralink
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can increase that bandwidth by several
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orders of magnitude and uh and also you
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don't have to spend as much time
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compressing ports into a small number of
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words you can do conceptual telepathy
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that is the idea behind your link it's
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so it is intended to be a mitigation
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against AI existential risk you talk
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about alignment can you explain what you
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mean by alignment to to help everyone
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understand yeah just is is AI going to
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do things that make civilization better
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make people happy or will it be contrary
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to uh Humanity will it will it Foster
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Humanity or or not will be against
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humanity so obviously we want an that
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will poster Humanity I think in
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developing an AI to post Humanity
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because I've thought about AI safety for
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a long time um I think I've had probably
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a thousand hours of discussion about
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this um and my ultimate conclusion is
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that the best course for AI safety is to
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have an AI that is maximally truth
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seeking uh and also curious and if you
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have both of those things I think it
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will Foster it will naturally Foster
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Humanity because people want to see how
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Humanity develops
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humanity is more interesting than not
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Humanity um you know I like Mars I'm a
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big fan of Mars obviously um and and I
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think we should become a multi-planet
(00:12:10)
civilization um I think that's that's
(00:12:13)
very important the purpose of SpaceX uh
(00:12:16)
is is to make life multiplanetary that's
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the reason I created the company and and
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that's the reason that we have the
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Starship development in South Texas that
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rocket is far far too big for just
(00:12:28)
satellites um it's it's a intended to
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establish Life on Mars not just you know
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send astronauts there briefly but to
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build a city on Mars and that's
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ultimately self- sustaining um so but
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getting back to AI the if if you've got
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a true seeking AI that is maximally
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curious my neural net my biological
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neural net says that that's going to be
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the the the safest outcome um because
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like see while like Mars you you could
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Mars is not as interesting as us because
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there's no human civilization there um
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or thought of another way if you if
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you're if you want to render Mars
(00:13:06)
rendering Mars is pretty easy it's
(00:13:08)
basically Red Red Rock on a look kind of
(00:13:10)
like some parts of Arizona you know as
(00:13:13)
not a lot of people um it's it's just
(00:13:17)
it's that's it's easy to render it's
(00:13:18)
render like to Mars but but rendering
(00:13:20)
human civilization much more much harder
(00:13:22)
much more complex much more interesting
(00:13:25)
and I so I think a curious truth seeking
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AI would plus to humanity and want to
(00:13:29)
see where it goes that relies on
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requires trust between the human and the
(00:13:34)
Machine and that's where I want to ask
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you a question on this so the Army
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leaders in the Army are um no strangers
(00:13:41)
to implementing new technologies um
(00:13:43)
think about how GPS for example
(00:13:45)
transform navigation it it'd be unheard
(00:13:47)
of not to use GPS uh today um but when I
(00:13:51)
was a lieutenant no one used GPS so
(00:13:53)
recently I was watching this incredibly
(00:13:55)
important and realistic documentary um
(00:13:58)
called Top Gun mavrick
(00:14:00)
yeah and in it I learned it's really
(00:14:03)
good it's really good it's a it's I mean
(00:14:06)
if you you don't want to think about the
(00:14:07)
plot too closely but it's a great movie
(00:14:09)
it's a fantastic movie I learned that
(00:14:11)
Tom Cruz is actually not an actor he's
(00:14:13)
like a pilot apparently but um he taught
(00:14:16)
me something really important in it he
(00:14:18)
says it's about the pilot not the plane
(00:14:20)
and right that's right before he defeats
(00:14:22)
a fifth generation fighter with a 19 14
(00:14:25)
right yeah yeah so I just go with a B
(00:14:28)
plan yeah there you go Tom Cruz could do
(00:14:30)
it s with camel in it you know it's it's
(00:14:34)
a bit of a cynicism or a cynical view of
(00:14:36)
the need for technology it's like hey
(00:14:39)
technology is Superfluous humans can do
(00:14:41)
it but we know that's I don't question
(00:14:43)
Tom Cruz lot I don't ever question Tom
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Cruz no I'm just kidding but I guess the
(00:14:48)
question is how do we get humans to be
(00:14:49)
able to trust the machines because there
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is a lot of stories for example uh we
(00:14:53)
just recently had a conversation where
(00:14:56)
uh where a pilot aache Pilots were given
(00:14:58)
new technology and they were like we're
(00:14:59)
not going to use it because we don't
(00:15:00)
really trust it use it and so how do you
(00:15:03)
get the how do you when new technolog is
(00:15:05)
implemented we have to be able to trust
(00:15:06)
it especially if it's going to be the
(00:15:08)
Difference Maker to to win so how do we
(00:15:09)
do that how do we build the trust
(00:15:11)
between the human and the Machine well I
(00:15:13)
I don't I don't I think we we shouldn't
(00:15:15)
just automatically trust these things um
(00:15:17)
I mean I think you want to test it out
(00:15:20)
um you do a lot of testing and uh see
(00:15:23)
how it actually works in a conflict at
(00:15:25)
small scale and then scale it up if it's
(00:15:28)
if it's effective
(00:15:30)
um but uh yeah I mean I have to say like
(00:15:33)
I I'm not sure for example that there is
(00:15:35)
a um fortunately this is not an Air
(00:15:38)
Force Gathering but there's there's not
(00:15:41)
I'm not sure there's a lot of room
(00:15:42)
opportunity for fighter pilots um
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because I think the if you've got a
(00:15:47)
drone swarm coming at you uh what what
(00:15:50)
the the pilots of liability in the fir
(00:15:52)
plane be honest uh so you know if if if
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you say you compare u a drone for us as
(00:16:00)
a fighter plane how easy is it to make a
(00:16:02)
drone you you can it's an order of
(00:16:04)
magnitude maybe at least at least 10
(00:16:07)
maybe 100 times easier to make the Drone
(00:16:09)
and you can afford to sacrifice the
(00:16:10)
drones whereas the pilots you don't want
(00:16:12)
to sacrifice the pilots so my guess is
(00:16:15)
that actually the the age of of human
(00:16:18)
palleted fighter aircraft is coming to
(00:16:21)
an end if that's the case uh then
(00:16:23)
there's a there's a a question that is
(00:16:26)
oftentimes debated and law and and
(00:16:28)
ethics debates about Killer Robots yes
(00:16:32)
and um really are these things that that
(00:16:35)
should we be willing to lean so forward
(00:16:37)
with the technology that we start to
(00:16:39)
supplant the the human pilot with the
(00:16:41)
technology and and where does that go um
(00:16:44)
and so what are your thoughts as we talk
(00:16:46)
about technology replacing humans on the
(00:16:48)
battlefield well I just what I'm saying
(00:16:50)
is that the the the at the front of the
(00:16:53)
battle lines it's going to be just
(00:16:54)
drones and any humans caught in the
(00:16:57)
crossfire are going to get it's killed
(00:17:00)
so it's it's it's a it's then then it's
(00:17:02)
irrelevant it's just going to be the
(00:17:03)
it's just going to be the way military
(00:17:04)
operations take place there isn't going
(00:17:06)
to be if you make the choice to be there
(00:17:08)
then you're you're at a significant
(00:17:09)
disadvantage yeah I mean I think it's
(00:17:12)
just think like you R drones that that
(00:17:15)
you know are constantly scanning they're
(00:17:17)
scanning in infrared scanning
(00:17:20)
invisible there's thous thousands of
(00:17:22)
them are t, you mention a million that
(00:17:25)
Ukraine's going to make got you got a
(00:17:26)
million drones coming at you yeah do you
(00:17:28)
do you want to be on
(00:17:30)
there with the try try to take out
(00:17:32)
drones of assault rifle it's like not
(00:17:34)
going to be a good situation um I mean I
(00:17:37)
think there there is there is something
(00:17:39)
where um if you go fully uh analog where
(00:17:44)
if you if you're if you can do um sort
(00:17:47)
of an Emi like electromagnetic explosion
(00:17:51)
of some kind that could trick it take
(00:17:53)
out Electronics but then you then your
(00:17:54)
electronics are going to go too so
(00:17:56)
you're going to go either fully analog
(00:17:58)
or fully digital um so I think that
(00:18:00)
there actually would be a role for a
(00:18:02)
fighter plane if it was fully analog and
(00:18:04)
had mechanical controls um because then
(00:18:07)
you could do an em sort of an EMF blast
(00:18:10)
take out the drones and the analog fight
(00:18:13)
I mean that could be anotherr Tom Cruz
(00:18:15)
mie maybe I don't know um you know um it
(00:18:19)
just goes a fully analog aircraft and
(00:18:21)
all the drones fall out of the sky
(00:18:22)
because of an EMF bomb how do you reply
(00:18:24)
to those in uh say industry that would
(00:18:27)
say I don't we don't want to contribute
(00:18:29)
to the the development of technology
(00:18:30)
that can be used by the Department of
(00:18:32)
Defense like basically we need to build
(00:18:33)
we need to build trust with with the
(00:18:35)
industrial base and with Society maybe
(00:18:37)
something we're doing what I mean how do
(00:18:38)
we how do we do that well I'm I'm very
(00:18:41)
prom military just so to be clear it's
(00:18:43)
good your audience will like that
(00:18:47)
yes
(00:18:49)
so so but I think what what what uh well
(00:18:54)
if if there's a significant conflict the
(00:18:57)
US industrial base will switch quickly
(00:18:59)
to military act military production just
(00:19:01)
did in World War II um is it you know is
(00:19:04)
it quick enough I don't know but that's
(00:19:05)
what probably happen um but yeah Ai and
(00:19:09)
Rance that's that's the future of
(00:19:11)
warfare and I mean tell me if I'm
(00:19:14)
missing something here where you where
(00:19:16)
do you see where do you see the domain
(00:19:17)
of space space uh yeah space is I mean
(00:19:21)
space is the ultimate High Ground so it
(00:19:24)
really goes Spacey big um real big so
(00:19:28)
well yeah you ever see like Earth to
(00:19:30)
scale with the sun and the you know it's
(00:19:32)
like wow we're just like a tiny little
(00:19:34)
dust mode you know floating around space
(00:19:37)
that's but space is becoming
(00:19:39)
increasingly militarized and so how did
(00:19:41)
you see that especially as it relates to
(00:19:43)
land Warfare like what's your thoughts
(00:19:45)
on the space domain as it relates to
(00:19:47)
land Warfare and and what are things
(00:19:49)
that we should be doing to to start to
(00:19:52)
gain those advantages that are necessary
(00:19:53)
well I mentioned I mentioned the
(00:19:55)
space-based communications is is
(00:19:57)
critical like if you can't communicate
(00:19:59)
you don't know what's going on can't
(00:20:00)
receive orders you can't report
(00:20:03)
information um and uh and whether it's a
(00:20:06)
human or a drone they need communication
(00:20:07)
so you got to have communications any
(00:20:09)
groundbased Communications like
(00:20:11)
fiberoptic fiber optic cables and uh
(00:20:15)
cell phone towers will be destroyed so
(00:20:17)
it's it's basically only all you've got
(00:20:19)
are basically analog radio radios and um
(00:20:23)
before any kind of data Communications
(00:20:24)
it's space based um and then while GPS
(00:20:28)
has been effective for a long time GPS
(00:20:29)
jamming at this point is pretty easy
(00:20:31)
because the GPS signal is is it's a weak
(00:20:34)
signal so it's easy to J do GPS jamming
(00:20:38)
um so having sort of a Next Generation A
(00:20:40)
system that can provide positioning is
(00:20:43)
is going to be very important um space
(00:20:46)
can also probably offer you know the the
(00:20:48)
ultimate weapons where you just have um
(00:20:51)
you know tungsten cannibals from allit
(00:20:53)
um how about offensive weapons in space
(00:20:55)
do you see those that's what I mean by
(00:20:57)
rods from God yeah so if you have like
(00:21:00)
you know CL they talked about this in in
(00:21:02)
the star war program in the80s but this
(00:21:04)
is certainly something we can't read
(00:21:05)
done which is you have just kinetic
(00:21:07)
weapons from space or space-based lasers
(00:21:10)
um soling system technically does have
(00:21:13)
lasers um but they're low power lasers
(00:21:17)
for now yeah so let me let me ask you
(00:21:19)
about back to this question about um
(00:21:22)
process process so so I like mil period
(00:21:26)
history also yeah uh so in um so in I
(00:21:30)
like all disciplines of the West Point
(00:21:31)
by the way I love all of so in um 149 BC
(00:21:36)
there was the third Punic Wars ongoing
(00:21:38)
and the Roman Legions are outside
(00:21:39)
Carthage and uh they lay Siege to
(00:21:42)
Carthage and it's not going very well
(00:21:45)
the pro councils that are in charge are
(00:21:48)
passive uh risk averse um and they're
(00:21:52)
losing and there's a young guy who's
(00:21:54)
from the famous skipio line of pro
(00:21:56)
counsels uh and it is it is skipio
(00:22:00)
amanas um who is the grandson the
(00:22:03)
adopted grandson skipio africanas and so
(00:22:06)
skipio is the only one who's doing
(00:22:08)
something and so KO the Elder is sitting
(00:22:10)
in the in the Senate and he says this he
(00:22:13)
says he alone still thinks the others
(00:22:16)
flit about in the shadows and his
(00:22:18)
basically argument was I want skipio in
(00:22:21)
charge and the problem was skipio was
(00:22:23)
too young you had to be 42 to be a pro
(00:22:24)
counsel and so K's like I don't care
(00:22:27)
he's the right guy and then was skipio
(00:22:29)
do he goes in he puts juice in's
(00:22:31)
Innovative and and they and obviously we
(00:22:33)
know have the third Punic Wars because
(00:22:35)
we know about Rome not Carthage right so
(00:22:37)
um what K was getting at is this need
(00:22:39)
for Innovative and creative and
(00:22:41)
entrepreneurial leaders right that's
(00:22:43)
what is necessary and so processes were
(00:22:45)
only as good as those who lead it and so
(00:22:47)
what are the traits you look for and
(00:22:49)
those who lead your various businesses
(00:22:51)
and Enterprises and I'm very much in
(00:22:53)
technology so for me uh if somebody is
(00:22:56)
going to lead something in technology
(00:22:59)
they must themselves be good at
(00:23:00)
technology meaning that if if they're
(00:23:03)
going to lead something that involves
(00:23:06)
complex engineering they must themselves
(00:23:08)
be good at at engineering they don't
(00:23:10)
necessarily need to be the best engineer
(00:23:12)
on the team but they need to be a they
(00:23:14)
need to be very competent in in their
(00:23:16)
field um so this is this is incredibly
(00:23:20)
important uh to to me if if if
(00:23:23)
somebody's leading a given engineering
(00:23:25)
field or engineering department and they
(00:23:27)
are not good at that that would be like
(00:23:29)
a Cavalry Captain who can't ride a horse
(00:23:32)
problem problem great leader in every
(00:23:34)
way except can't ride a horse um and
(00:23:37)
then you got to charge into battle and
(00:23:39)
Calvary Captain falls off the horse you
(00:23:40)
know it's not aspiring so uh Calvary
(00:23:45)
Captain must be able to ride a horse um
(00:23:47)
that's that's so that that that's
(00:23:49)
actually they they need to be the best
(00:23:51)
horse rider but they must be competent
(00:23:53)
in this regard otherwise they cannot
(00:23:54)
evaluate the talent of the team um and
(00:23:57)
they don't understand the technology
(00:23:59)
that's being developed this may seem
(00:24:00)
like a simple thing but it is often the
(00:24:03)
the case that this this is overlooked um
(00:24:06)
you know I don't want to pick on the CEO
(00:24:08)
boing but uh go to you know degree in
(00:24:11)
accounting or something um which I think
(00:24:14)
that's the you know you want to have
(00:24:15)
like a someone who knows how airplanes F
(00:24:18)
work running the airplane company I
(00:24:21)
guess I cross out my job that Boeing CEO
(00:24:24)
there can't do that I me you know it's
(00:24:26)
like it's like you want to you want to
(00:24:28)
not be the it's just if if you're
(00:24:30)
running an airplane company you should
(00:24:31)
know how airplane you should know how
(00:24:33)
airplanes work and how they fly and how
(00:24:35)
to design airplane um I think that's
(00:24:38)
pretty important um so I think it's
(00:24:40)
vital but how do you create Innovative
(00:24:43)
intuition in those that work for you I
(00:24:45)
mean you're you're you're famous
(00:24:48)
for uh trying to gain efficiencies
(00:24:51)
create create better processes pushing
(00:24:54)
to try to to try to um to gain those not
(00:24:57)
just efficiencies but Effectiveness so
(00:24:58)
how do you is it possible can you build
(00:25:00)
this Innovative intuition in a person
(00:25:03)
well I think it is possible to learn to
(00:25:05)
be Innovative you know a lot of times
(00:25:07)
for for any given thing uh you have to
(00:25:10)
say did you try this may sound sound
(00:25:14)
obvious uh but actually try like you
(00:25:19)
somebody might wonder well can I be
(00:25:20)
Innovative well have you tried try
(00:25:23)
thinking of interesting ideas I mean I I
(00:25:25)
do find a good source of of innovation
(00:25:27)
is if you read if you read about a whole
(00:25:30)
bunch of fields you can cross balize
(00:25:32)
ideas from one field into another and so
(00:25:34)
you can
(00:25:35)
synthesize t a SpaceX and Tesla the
(00:25:39)
automotive industry is very good at
(00:25:41)
manufacturing um it's a in terms of
(00:25:44)
manufacturing complex machines at volume
(00:25:47)
the automotive industry is the best the
(00:25:50)
now the rocket industry space industry
(00:25:53)
is very good at Advanced Materials and
(00:25:55)
making things very light um and uh and
(00:25:58)
so so taking Advanced Materials and mass
(00:26:03)
optimization uh Concepts from the space
(00:26:05)
industry applying it to automotive and
(00:26:07)
taking Automotive Mass manufacturing
(00:26:10)
techniques and applying it to space was
(00:26:12)
kind of like a superpower but when you
(00:26:14)
that's interesting is when you think
(00:26:15)
about it when you're talking about
(00:26:16)
innovating though and you said people
(00:26:17)
can try that means you have to be
(00:26:19)
willing to let them fail yes and so
(00:26:21)
where do you draw the line between
(00:26:24)
recklessness and being overly cautious
(00:26:26)
no if if you're not if you're not
(00:26:28)
failing at least some of the time you're
(00:26:29)
not trying hard enough uh you have to
(00:26:31)
fail some of the time um so you know
(00:26:34)
it's more like a batting average
(00:26:35)
somebody should have a good batting
(00:26:37)
average but nobody bats a thousand but
(00:26:38)
if somebody bats zero all the time I
(00:26:40)
mean okay you know you got to take them
(00:26:41)
off
(00:26:43)
um
(00:26:45)
so uh so I think I I do have this sort
(00:26:49)
of simple first principles algorithm
(00:26:51)
that I think could be quite helpful um
(00:26:55)
and I sort of say it as a monitor to
(00:26:57)
myself because I've made this mistake so
(00:27:00)
many times um so the first element is
(00:27:04)
for any given thing make make the make
(00:27:07)
the requirements less dumb um so so what
(00:27:10)
whatever problem you're solved make the
(00:27:11)
requirements less dumb and whoever gave
(00:27:13)
you those requirements even if they are
(00:27:15)
the smartest person in the world they're
(00:27:16)
still dumb so the so if if say like this
(00:27:21)
is where uh say military procurement it
(00:27:24)
goes wrong right at the outset with
(00:27:26)
excess requirements so you'll get sort
(00:27:29)
of this giant document of requirements
(00:27:31)
that actually should be like one page um
(00:27:34)
so step one make the requirements
(00:27:36)
simplifying just make requirements less
(00:27:38)
done um because if you don't make if you
(00:27:40)
don't do that as the first step then you
(00:27:43)
can get the right answer but to the
(00:27:45)
wrong question if the question's wrong
(00:27:48)
it's it doesn't matter so then then the
(00:27:53)
the step two is delete the part or
(00:27:56)
process step delete um and if you're not
(00:27:59)
putting in if if you're not adding back
(00:28:01)
10% of what you deleted you not you
(00:28:03)
haven't deleted enough this again the
(00:28:05)
subance I think be very obvious but it's
(00:28:08)
very effective um but it goes the idea
(00:28:11)
is like if if you're not if you're not
(00:28:14)
if some of the ideas that you're doing
(00:28:15)
don't fail you're not trying hard enough
(00:28:18)
um and then only the third step is to
(00:28:21)
optimize the thing um and if I say like
(00:28:25)
what's one of the mistakes that I see
(00:28:27)
smart people making all the time
(00:28:30)
especially smart Engineers is optimizing
(00:28:32)
a thing that should not exist sounds
(00:28:34)
obvious you know um like you could try
(00:28:37)
to make let's have the world's best B
(00:28:39)
plane cloth B plane I'm like well
(00:28:40)
actually know we should have jet
(00:28:42)
airplanes instead you know um so we
(00:28:45)
should optimize the thing that should
(00:28:46)
not exist um and then step p is go
(00:28:50)
faster again it sounds really obvious
(00:28:53)
but people just don't try going faster
(00:28:56)
um and the the step would be to automate
(00:29:00)
something um but only automated once
(00:29:03)
you've done those those other four
(00:29:05)
things now the reason I I have this mtro
(00:29:08)
is because I've personally many times
(00:29:11)
automated something sped it up optimized
(00:29:15)
it and then deleted it and I'm like wait
(00:29:17)
I'm tired of going backwards here so um
(00:29:21)
if you run that that simple algorithm uh
(00:29:23)
in many Arenas of life you will be
(00:29:26)
shocked at how effective it is so shock
(00:29:28)
Le we are already running out of time um
(00:29:32)
so let me ask you this if you could
(00:29:33)
choose one attribute just one attribute
(00:29:37)
that' be critical for our future
(00:29:38)
officers uh to have to be successful
(00:29:41)
what would it be curiosity as long as
(00:29:43)
you're not not a cat but curiosity um
(00:29:46)
try to read as much as possible learn as
(00:29:48)
much as possible um and in in many
(00:29:50)
different fields um and apply critical
(00:29:53)
thinking to anything that you're told
(00:29:57)
thank you so I'd like to say on behalf
(00:29:59)
of Lieutenant General Gillan um and the
(00:30:02)
the the entire Academy um we're really
(00:30:04)
thankful that that you're here we're
(00:30:06)
really thankful you took the time to
(00:30:08)
help us uh celebrate the Excellence of
(00:30:10)
the faculty and the cadets um and really
(00:30:14)
sharing some wisdom with us because
(00:30:15)
we're really thinking about what do we
(00:30:17)
need to do to be successful uh because
(00:30:20)
we have a very important Mission which
(00:30:21)
is a no fail Mission which is we have to
(00:30:24)
fight and win and we're laser focused on
(00:30:25)
that yeah well I mean in in my view
(00:30:29)
or I think probably a lot of people's
(00:30:30)
views um you know uh America is like
(00:30:36)
like Atlas holding up the Free World and
(00:30:38)
you are the arms of Atlas thank you Mr M
