Reviews:
“In this crucial new
book, Jeremy Packer and Joshua Reeves offer a provocative, media-centric analysis
of automated killing machines. Engaging with an armada of flying sensors,
robotic submarines, and AI weapons already in use, they show that big data,
computer vision, and super intelligence emerge not just to order and organize
the battlefield, but to produce new enemies. Clever and incisive, the book
provides a haunting look at warfare of the near future.”
— Lisa Parks,
coeditor of Life in the Age of Drone Warfare
“This is an excellent
book: well designed, thoroughly engaging, informative and, unfortunately,
extremely topical and timely. The authors have gone to great lengths to make Killer
Apps relentlessly up to date, providing readers with the latest in weapons
developments, including AI drones and ‘swarmanoid’ robotics. With its
impressive grounding in theory and hardware, it will become the go-to book for
critical understandings of the intersection of warfare, media, and enmity.”
— Geoffrey
Winthrop-Young, author of Kittler and the Media
“By focusing first and
foremost on the epistemological function of military media, Packer and Reeves
have produced a range of rigorous and highly engaging analyses, with broad
applicability across a range of possible fields of research.”
— Malcolm Ogden,
Critical Studies in Media Communication
Description:
In
Killer Apps Jeremy Packer and Joshua Reeves provide a detailed account of
the rise of automation in warfare, showing how media systems are central to
building weapons systems with artificial intelligence in order to more
efficiently select and eliminate military targets. Drawing on the insights of a
wide range of political and media theorists, Packer and Reeves develop a new
theory for understanding how the intersection of media and military strategy
drives today’s AI arms race. They address the use of media to search for
enemies in their analyses of the history of automated radar systems, the search
for extraterrestrial life, and the development of military climate science,
which treats the changing earth as an enemy. As the authors demonstrate,
contemporary military strategy demands perfect communication in an evolving
battlespace that is increasingly inhospitable to human frailties, necessitating
humans’ replacement by advanced robotics, machine intelligence, and media
systems.
Contents:
Acknowledgments
Preface
to an Inauthentic Document
Introduction:
Event Matrix (DoD)
Chapter 1. Identification Friend or Foe
(DoD)
Chapter 2. Centralized
Control/Decentralized Execution (DoD)
Chapter 3. Hostile Environment (DoD)
Chapter 4. In Extremis (DoD)
Chapter 5. Intelligence, Surveillance,
and Reconnaissance (DoD)
Chapter 6. Autonomous Operation (DoD)
Chapter 7. Vital Ground (DoD)
Chapter 8. Escalation (DoD)
Chapter 9. Unidentified Flying Objects
(USAF)
Conclusion.
Armistice (DoD)
Notes
References
Index
About the Authors:
Jeremy Packer is Associate Professor in
the Institute for Communication, Culture, Information, and Technology at the
University of Toronto.
Joshua Reeves is an Associate Professor
in the School of Communication and Media at Oregon State University.
Target Audience:
People
interested in detailed account of the rise of automation in warfare, showing
how media systems are central to building weapons systems with artificial
intelligence in order to more efficiently select and eliminate military
targets. Helps People understand the role of media in military strategy,
military command and military
epistemology.