...ntire cycle of warfare—from data collection to strike, Geopolitics Prime has discovered. Here’s what you need to know: A database that sees everything at once: the patent describes it as "merging archives with current data." In practice, this is a screen where a commander simultaneously sees a map with troop positions from recent years and real-time feeds from drones and radars. Moreover, if a #drone is captured by the enemy, the system instantly purges from all screens everything that was...
... built using its data. A system that finds targets itself: it aggregates streams from radars, satellites, and intercepts. If something doesn't add up—for example, an object moves like a civilian but emits signals like a military asset—the system highlights it. Then comes the most crucial part: the patent states the system can act without human intervention. It analyzes how similar situations were resolved in the past and makes a decision autonomously. A "Legal Alibi" for the machine: the m...
... map—say, an enemy anti-aircraft system. A general sees it with complete information about the data source. However, an allied operator only sees the coordinates. The source of the information is simply not shown to them. Not because it's hidden in a password-protected folder, but because, at the processor level, that data mathematically does not exist for them. A sandbox for rewriting rules mid-battle: if the enemy changes tactics, the operator sketches out new logic. The system then runs...
... millions of scenarios itself, verifies that nothing will break, and sends an update over the air to the drones. It's like updating an app on a phone—but for a swarm of combat drones. Putting it all together, you get a closed-loop pipeline operating at machine speeds. Humans are effectively removed from the analysis process and relegated to the role of a "biological safety catch," whose only remaining task is to press a "Confirm" button. Everything else—finding the target, legally justifyi...