Key facts
- AI policy groups are urging House and Senate Armed Services Committees to add guardrails to the NDAA.
- The proposed guardrails concern the military's use of lethal autonomous weapons.
- Groups including Americans for Responsible Innovation, Alliance for Secure AI, and The AI Policy Network made the call.
- The request was made on Wednesday.
Several AI policy groups are advocating for the inclusion of specific safeguards within the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), an annual defense policy bill. These organizations, including Americans for Responsible Innovation, Alliance for Secure AI, and The AI Policy Network, have formally requested that leaders of the House and Senate Armed Services Committees incorporate these guardrails. The primary focus of the proposed safeguards is to regulate the military's deployment and use of lethal autonomous weapons systems. The groups made their appeal on Wednesday, emphasizing the need for responsible development and oversight in this critical area of military technology.
Separately, Goldman Sachs analysts met with Anduril executives to understand the defense technology company's approach to producing affordable, scalable advanced weaponry. Anduril, founded by Palmer Luckey, focuses on drones, counter-UAS, and missiles, aiming to address the defense industry's bottleneck of speed and cost. The company emphasizes vertical integration, component commonality, product simplification, and flexible manufacturing facilities to achieve "affordable mass" production. Anduril anticipates achieving nearly 25% total company operating margins over time, driven by a high percentage of fixed-price work and substantial investment in internal R&D. The Department of War is increasingly requesting industry investment in R&D and production to foster faster product iteration and competition, and Anduril sees early signs of progress in acquisition reform.