The U.S.’s top counterintelligence and security agency recently published a list of five technology sectors vital to U.S. national and economic security that it says are vulnerable to malicious actors and adversaries.

According to the National Counterintelligence and Security Center, those five prized sectors are artificial intelligence, bioeconomy, autonomous systems, quantum information science and technology, and semiconductors.

“These sectors produce technologies that may determine whether America remains the world’s leading superpower or is eclipsed by strategic competitors in the next few years,” the NCSC says.

Although the threat mainly comes from near-peer adversaries, such as China and Russia, it isn’t limited to those countries. In addition to publishing the list, the U.S. intelligence community is contacting private industry with advice and training to protect U.S. national security and the U.S.’s competitive advantages.

 

Artificial Intelligence

robot dancing
Children dance with a companion robot at the World Robot Conference, in Beijing, October 21, 2016. (Photo by Ng Han Guan/AP)

Artificial intelligence is a constellation of technologies that demonstrate cognition and creative problem-solving, essentially enabling machines to perform the tasks of humans.

Uses for AI range from narrow applications designed to solve specific problems to broad applications, such as Artificial General Intelligence, that have the potential to match or even exceed the understanding and learning abilities of humans.

Artificial intelligence also has many military applications. The F-35 stealth fighter jet relies heavily on artificial intelligence for many of its functions. Compromising that technology could undermine or negate many of the jet’s capabilities.