Drone Swarms: Uncomfortably Plausible
a day ago
- #Civilian Defense
- #Autonomous Weapons
- #Drone Swarms
- The author carries a concealed handgun but realizes it would be useless against a new threat: autonomous drone swarms.
- Previously dismissed the robot apocalypse concept, but now sees drones as a credible danger due to real-world use in Ukraine and gameplay experiences.
- Weaponized drones are described as flying land mines that can seek targets, move in three dimensions, use infrared vision, and detonate upon proximity.
- The cost of such drones is low (around $500-1000 each), making them accessible; a home equity loan could fund hundreds.
- The real danger lies in coordinated swarms, similar to drone light shows but armed with explosives, overwhelming traditional air defenses.
- Building such drones is feasible with legal components, relying only on ethics for prevention, which is a thin layer of protection.
- No rogue AI needed; a single disgruntled individual with resources could launch a catastrophic attack.
- There is no meaningful civilian defense against drone swarms; handguns and shotguns are ineffective, and legal restrictions hinder effective countermeasures.
- Civilian governments and police forces are unlikely to develop effective defenses, given their track record with simpler threats like school shootings.
- Defensive drone swarms are a theoretical solution but face enormous engineering challenges and security vulnerabilities, as seen in other municipal technologies.
- A doom loop exists: individual defense is illegal, private deployment lacks political will, government deployment inherits security failures, while the threat becomes cheaper.
- Despite sounding like science fiction, the logic is clear: mature technology, cheap legal components, nonexistent defenses, outdated regulations, and proven effectiveness in Ukraine.