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Artificial Intelligence
Business Fortune
05 November, 2024
The social media giant has partnered with leading contractors alongside tech industry leaders to facilitate government adoption of its AI technology.
Meta announced on Monday that its open source AI models will be made available to U.S. defense and national security agencies, marking a significant expansion of Llama AI military applications. The move involves partnerships with major defense contractors and technology companies to implement Meta’s Llama language models across various national security operations.
The social media giant has partnered with leading contractors including Lockheed Martin, Palantir, and Anduril, alongside tech industry leaders such as Amazon Web Services, Microsoft, and IBM, to facilitate government adoption of its AI technology. These partnerships will enable military and security agencies to leverage advanced language models for tasks ranging from aircraft maintenance to operational planning.
Several implementations are already underway. Oracle is developing systems to synthesize aircraft maintenance documents, aimed at reducing repair times for military aircraft. Scale AI is customizing the technology for national security team missions, including operational planning and threat assessment. Lockheed Martin has integrated Llama AI Factory to enhance various defense-related applications.
The announcement comes amid increasing global competition in AI development, particularly from China. Meta positions this move as crucial for establishing U.S. leadership in open source AI standards, similar to how Linux and Android became global standards in their respective domains.
The Company also stated that other nations – including China and other competitors of the United States – understand this as well, and are racing to develop their own open source models, investing heavily to leap ahead of the U.S.
To address potential concerns about military AI applications, Meta emphasized its commitment to ethical deployment. The company stated that all implementations will align with international law and the Political Declaration on Responsible Military Use of Artificial Intelligence and Autonomy, a framework the United States and its allies have endorsed.