The White Stork startup, of former Google CEO Eric Schmidt, to equip Ukraine with AI-powered attack drones

 



The White Stork startup, founded by former Google CEO Eric Schmidt, aims to equip Ukraine with AI-powered attack drones.

Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt's new drone startup White Stork is preparing to help Ukraine by developing AI attack drones. These drones, capable of identifying targets autonomously, aim to revolutionize warfare and minimize casualties on the ground. Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt has revealed that his new drone startup, White Stork, plans to support Ukraine by developing AI attack drones. According to a Business Insider (BI) report, Schmidt's company aims to create advanced drones capable of identifying targets autonomously, reducing the need for traditional ground combat. In an April lecture at Stanford University, Schmidt expressed frustration with the destruction caused by the Russian military in Ukraine, saying: "Watching the Russians use tanks to destroy residential buildings with little old people and children, the BI report drove me crazy. Schmidt, who is now a licensed arms dealer, said: "A computer scientist, a businessman, an arms dealer. I don't recommend this as your career path, I would rather AI" , as reported in the report. White Stork, co-founded with Udacity CEO Sebastian Thrun, focuses on mass production of sophisticated drones at a lower cost Schmidt emphasized. that these drones, backed by government support, will be deployed directly in Ukraine to "fight the war," according to the report.

Schmidt previously chaired the National Security Committee on Artificial Intelligence and served as CEO of Google from 2001 to 2011,” the report said. Eric Schmidt's previous statements


Schmidt recently made headlines when he said his former company was losing the artificial intelligence race and that remote work was to blame, according to a WSJ report.

"Google decided that work-life balance, going home early and working from home were more important than winning," Schmidt said at a conference at Stanford University. "The reason startups work is because people work like crazy," according to a WSJ report.

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