Weapons systems have respectively acknowledged their potential overlaps, none of them have explored the threats that might arise from the use of ai-enabled autonomous weapons in the virtual domain. similarly, in the tallinn manual 2.0, the international group of experts has acknowl- edged the capacity for autonomous operations of software agents and worms when defining those terms, but it did not explore their legal and ethical implications. this is coun- terintuitive, especially if we consider that the cyberspace might well be the first area where autonomous weapons will be consistently deployed, given that it is easier and cheaper to introduce ai-enabled autonomy in the virtual domain. this paper aims at offering a preliminary analysis of the

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  • who: from the PhD. Candidate at the Sant`Anna School of Advanced Studies, Piazza Martiri della Libertu00e0, Pisa, PI, Italy have published the research: Weapons Systems have respectively acknowledged their potential overlaps, none of them have explored the threats that might arise from the use of AI-enabled autonomous weapons in the virtual domain. Similarly, in the Tallinn Manual 2.0, the International Group of Experts has acknowl- edged the capacity for autonomous operations of software agents and worms when defining those terms, but it did not explore their legal and ethical implications. This is coun- terintuitive . . .

     

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