25 comments
  • roxolotl1d

    We don’t need agi or superintelligence for these things to be dangerous. We just need to be willing to hand over our decision making to a machine.

    And of course a human can make a wrong call too. In this scenario that’s what is happening. And of course we should bring all of our tools to bear when it comes to evaluating nuclear threats.

    But that doesn’t make it less concerning that we’ve now got machines capable of linguistic persuasion in that toolset.

    • asah1d

      "hand over" is a misnomer - what actually happens is that there's an interaction with a machine and people either trust it too much, or forget that it's a machine (i.e. handed from one person to another and the "AI warning" label is accidentally or intentionally ripped off)

  • laughingcurve1d

    https://arxiv.org/abs/2509.17192

    Shall We Play a Game? Language Models for Open-ended Wargames

    Wargames are simulations of conflicts in which participants' decisions influence future events. While casual wargaming can be used for entertainment or socialization, serious wargaming is used by experts to explore strategic implications of decision-making and experiential learning. In this paper, we take the position that Artificial Intelligence (AI) systems, such as Language Models (LMs), are rapidly approaching human-expert capability for strategic planning -- and will one day surpass it. Military organizations have begun using LMs to provide insights into the consequences of real-world decisions during _open-ended wargames_ which use natural language to convey actions and outcomes. We argue the ability for AI systems to influence large-scale decisions motivates additional research into the safety, interpretability, and explainability of AI in open-ended wargames. To demonstrate, we conduct a scoping literature review with a curated selection of 100 unclassified studies on AI in wargames, and construct a novel ontology of open-endedness using the creativity afforded to players, adjudicators, and the novelty provided to observers. Drawing from this body of work, we distill a set of practical recommendations and critical safety considerations for deploying AI in open-ended wargames across common domains. We conclude by presenting the community with a set of high-impact open research challenges for future work

  • motbus31d

    This is not unlikely. This is actually likely. The instructions for those agents is to find signals that prove there is an attack. Llms are steered to do what they are requested. They will interpret the signals a strongly as possible. They will omit counter evidence to achieve their objective. They will distort analysis to find their objective.

    This has been everyone's llm problem daily. How is not that clear yet?

    • chuckadams1d

      I don't disagree, but just to play devils advocate: the LLM can also be told to look for counter-evidence, and will at least make a stab at doing so. That's more than we can expect from the humans currently in charge.

  • chuckadams1d

    Would you like to play a game?

    • laughingcurve1d

      The quote is "Shall we play a game?”.

      “Would you like to play a game?" is from Saw.

    • belter20h

      [dead]

  • rglover1d

    The big problem here is determining how vigilant those in command are about vetting the AI's responses. This feels like one of those systems that works great until someone vaporizes a hallucinated target that was actually civilians or unintended targets. This should be mitigated by having a MITM, but still. Risky. Humans make mistakes, too, and they're inclined to just "believe what the computer says," so as much as I'd love to believe this ends with a white picket fence scene, my instincts are screaming "dig a bunker, homie."

  • adrianmsmith1d

    > Replacing human hesitation with machine confidence removes the one safeguard that has prevented nuclear war since 1945. Until militaries implement documented human authorisation...we are blindly automating our own destruction

    In the scenario described there literally is a human in the loop: the president is a human?

  • __lain__1d

    Every once in a while I'll send a false positive security alert to Claude, one that isn't even very subtle its just obviously incorrectly flagged, and every time it freaks out and tells me I have an active intruder and it actually gets itself worked up in a panic.

    I have high hopes for our future.

  • thomascountz1d

    See: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47248385

    Anthropic's AI tool Claude central to U.S. campaign in Iran...

  • mdlxxv1d

    A strange game. The only winning move is not to play.

    How about a nice game of chess?

  • user27221d

    No-one got fired for ~buying IBM~ following a statistical-based text output.

    • shmeeed1d

      In this scenario, ICBMs got fired.

      • coip18h

        Ah, the good ol Inter Continental Business Machines

  • twoodfin1d

    Since the beginning of the nuclear age, literally billions of dollars have been spent paying incredibly smart people to model all aspects of nuclear war, including the chain of escalation under uncertainty.

    Not to discount the importance of this risk, but we’re not likely to sleepwalk into it, barring a collapse in strategic & operational competence in planning (yeah, yeah) that would make MANY risks dangerously severe.

    • collingreen1d

      There are several examples already of the modeling leading to systems that all incorrectly handled faults and pointed toward nuclear war as the correct next action. Each of these times _so far_ a human has gone against the strategic planning and operational competence you're talking about and decided personally to get more information before killing millions of people (and they were all correct so far!)

      Diluting or delegating decision making to committees, processes, models, or AI all have essentially the same shape.

      We can either appreciate how lucky we've been so far and actually learn from these near-doomsdays or we can choose to keep rolling the dice with our eyes covered.

    • pkaral9h

      There are so many implicit premises in that short comment, such as:

      - Incredibly smart people are always right when it comes to extremely complex systems involving both deterministic behavior and human psychology - The people with the nuclear codes will be given their orders by (or themselves be) incredibly smart people - Wargames work (they have a horrible track record) - The best plans are based on a complete understanding of the starting conditions and the factors that influence the modelling (including the "unknown unknowns")

      I could go on.

      • twoodfin9h

        I’m not sure what you’re objecting to about my comment, except a bunch of “implicit premises” you read into it.

  • user27221d

    I'd posit the faster we feed LLM exhisting nuclear crisis and invented, dissimilar to its training corpus, nuclear scenarios, the better we will know how wrong they can be. Fear-mongering isn't lucrative, isn't dopamine triggering, isn't actionable, doesn't look good on the resume, so it's tipically ignored.

    • itintheory1d

      > Fear-mongering isn't lucrative, isn't dopamine triggering

      Isn't it? Isn't fear-mongering one of the main selling points for news-media? And a driving factor of engagement in social media?

  • burnt-resistor22h

    How about a nice game of chess?

  • Simulacra1d

    Reading this I was reminded of this story:

    "At the Abyss: An Insider's History of the Cold War" recounted that the United States added a Trojan horse to gas pipeline control software that the Soviet Union obtained from a company in Canada. According to the author, when the components were deployed on a Trans-Siberian gas pipeline, the Trojan horse led to a huge explosion. He wrote: "The pipeline software that was to run the pumps, turbines and valves was programmed to go haywire, to reset pump speeds and valve settings to produce pressures far beyond those acceptable to the pipeline joints and welds. The result was the most monumental non-nuclear explosion and fire ever seen from space."

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/At_the_Abyss

  • aaron6951d

    [dead]