Killer apps : war, media, machine / Jeremy Packer and Joshua Reeves.
Publisher: Durham ; London : Duke University Press, 2020Copyright date: ©2020Description: x, 270 pages : illustrations, maps ; 24 cmContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 1478005874
- 1478006579
- 9781478005872
- 9781478006572
- 355.40285 23
- UG479 .P33 2020
Item type | Current library | Shelving location | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book | NMC Library | Stacks | UG479 .P33 2020 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 33039001500593 |
Browsing NMC Library shelves, Shelving location: Stacks Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
UG450 .S45 2009 Wired for war : the robotics revolution and conflict in the twenty-first century / | UG450 .S68 2013 Military robots and drones : a reference handbook / | UG479 .G66 2022 War virtually : the quest to automate conflict, militarize data, and predict the future / | UG479 .P33 2020 Killer apps : war, media, machine / | UG479 .S337 2019 Army of none : autonomous weapons and the future of war / | UG593 .Z48 2014 Countdown to Zero Day : Stuxnet and the launch of the world's first digital weapon / | UG611 .M33 2003 The searchers : how radio interception changed the course of both world wars / |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 235-259) and index.
Preface to an inauthentic document -- Event matrix -- Identification friend or foe -- Centralized control / decentralized execution -- In extremis -- Hostile environment -- Autonomous operation -- Intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance -- Escalation -- Vital ground -- Unidentified flying objects -- Conclusion: Armistice.
"From the telegraph and the two-way radio to high-frequency satellites and free-space optical communications, media technologies have changed the way in which troops are organized and deployed, the constitution of armies, and the nature and definitions of warfare itself. Focusing in particular on the rise of artificial intelligence technologies, Killer Apps shows how media helps to produce enemies and enable war. Co-authors Jeremy Packer and Joshua Reeves offer what they call a polemocentric theory of media escalation, demonstrating that media will never usher in world peace. Quite the opposite-when animated by struggle, media will always escalate towards greater chaos and creative destruction. Each chapter begins with a Department of Defense definition of a military term, and draws from it to theorize the recent escalation of technologies of violence and surveillance. In one chapter, Packer and Reeves critique liberal ideologies of artificial intelligence that suggest it could offer us a feminist and egalitarian future: instead, they demonstrate, AI technologies developed by military contractors serve only to reproduce global capitalism and militarism. Another chapter takes up the historical interpenetration of climate knowledge and warfare to show how global climate catastrophe has enabled and inspired new forms of military and surveillance media technologies. Packer and Reeves trace the history of unmanned military aircraft from explosive balloons used by the Austrian military in 1849, to aerial remote-controlled torpedoes deployed in World War 1, to CIA drone attacks in Afghanistan, Yemen, and Pakistan. Finally, they turn to science fiction visions: while authors and filmmakers have often imaged post-apocalyptic moments as a setting for building a liberal future of global harmony, freedom, and unfettered capitalism, Packer and Reeves turn to science fictional visions of robot mutiny and AI-driven nuclear annihilation to consider the role militarized media will have to play in catastrophe. KILLER APPS will interest scholars of media and communication studies, technology studies, and critical studies of militarism and surveillance"-- Provided by publisher.
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