Episode 18: Drones, Defence and Misinformation
This is a different kind of episode. Holly Joint joins from a region now living under daily missile alerts, and the conversation with Ewan MacLeod turns from the usual workplace-and-AI territory to something far more immediate: how technology shapes life, safety and truth in a conflict zone. It is, by both hosts' admission, a difficult subject, but one they feel matters too much to skip.
Holly describes a striking asymmetry in modern warfare. On one side, cheap, low-tech drones crossing overhead several times a day; on the other, a sophisticated, AI-enabled defence system that calculates trajectories, identifies interception points and responds in extraordinarily short windows, always, she stresses, with a human in the loop. Living beneath it, she explains how that technology translates into a genuine sense of safety, and how the household adapts: honest but calm conversations with the children, reframing the frightening boom of an intercept as the sound of a missile stopped and everyone kept safe.
A recurring theme is information itself. In wartime, Holly notes, misinformation and propaganda flood WhatsApp groups and social feeds, and one of the smartest uses of technology she's seen is a simple web app that aggregates only official sources, the government media office, ministry of defence, crisis management, into a single trusted place to check rumours against. Alongside this, she points to the quiet rise of low-cost AI therapy tools helping people cope, because living under missiles is not normal, however well one carries on.
The episode has its lighter human moments too: Holly's 3am backup-battery purchases during sleepless nights, which turned out more useful against thunderstorms than the war, and Ewan's enthusiasm for Starlink, both as a home backup and, more seriously, as genuinely transformative infrastructure. They touch on its life-or-death role in conflicts like Ukraine and Iran, and how connectivity can boost economies that lack reliable infrastructure.
The conversation closes on the hardest question of all: the ethics of AI in warfare. Holly raises Anthropic's decision to restrict how its tools may be used, and the consequence of being removed from a US Department of War supplier list, a move both hosts find genuinely significant. They circle back to a book referenced in an earlier episode, "If Anyone Builds It, Everyone Dies," and to autonomous weapons, computer vision targeting, and the danger of AI's misplaced certainty in contexts where a wrong answer costs lives. Both land firmly in the same place: humans must stay in the loop, and far more work is needed to understand the consequences.
Key Topics
* The asymmetry of cheap drones versus high-tech AI defence
* How AI-enabled interception systems work, with a human in the loop
* Living and parenting calmly under daily missile alerts
* Combating wartime misinformation by aggregating trusted sources
* Low-cost AI therapy tools for people under stress
* Starlink as resilient, sometimes life-or-death, connectivity
* Anthropic's use restrictions and removal from a US supplier list
* The ethics of autonomous weapons and AI certainty in warfare
Links & References
* Starlink — https://www.starlink.com [https://www.starlink.com]
* Anthropic — https://www.anthropic.com [https://www.anthropic.com]
* If Anyone Builds It, Everyone Dies (Eliezer Yudkowsky & Nate Soares) — https://ifanyonebuildsit.com [https://ifanyonebuildsit.com]
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