No, this isn’t science fiction. According to Wired’s Danger Room, an automatic defense system went out of control in South Africa during a live fire exercise. Nine soldiers lost their lives, and fourteen were injured.
I’m not going to make any jokes about this one, since we’ve crossed from the theoretical to the real, with a tragic loss of life.
There’s not much else to say.
Reader interactions
3 Replies to “When Software Bugs Kill: Robotic Cannon Kills 9”
Ah, according to The Register, “Pentagon: Our new robot army will be controlled by malware”—”Open-source hax0r IP-deathware apocalypse imminent”.
This reminds me of several probabilities, all approaching 1. I bet today’s a busy day for the RISKS Digest people.
It is inevitable that this will slow down adoption of completely automated weapons.
It is inevitable that this will not stop adoption of completely automated weapons.
It is inevitable that in the future some weapon will have a serious bug and malfunction. Hopefully this won’‘t be as common as desktop PC crashes.
It is exceedingly likely that in the future some weapons (whether a robotically controlled firearm or something more sophisticated) will run Windows—subs already do.
It is exceedingly likely that in the future someone will attack such a weapons platform at the software level—The Register is currently speculating whether this has just happened to Syrian air defenses.
Brave new (scary) world!
[…] Robot Cannon Kills 9, Wounds 14 on Danger Room [via Securosis] […]