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Main Authors: Wood, Nathan G., Robbins, Scott, Berodt, Eduardo Zegarra, von Westerholt, Anton Graf, Behrndt, Michelle, Budig, Hauke, Kloock-Schreiber, Daniel
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2602.17729
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author Wood, Nathan G.
Robbins, Scott
Berodt, Eduardo Zegarra
von Westerholt, Anton Graf
Behrndt, Michelle
Budig, Hauke
Kloock-Schreiber, Daniel
author_facet Wood, Nathan G.
Robbins, Scott
Berodt, Eduardo Zegarra
von Westerholt, Anton Graf
Behrndt, Michelle
Budig, Hauke
Kloock-Schreiber, Daniel
contents Across academia, industry, and government, ``AI'' has become central in research and development, regulatory debates, and promises of ever faster and more capable decision-making and action. In numerous domains, especially safety-critical ones, there are significant concerns over how ``AI'' may affect decision-making, responsibility, or the likelihood of mistakes (to name only a few categories of critique). However, for most critiques, the target is generally ``AI'', a broad term admitting many (types of) systems used for a variety of tasks and each coming with its own set of limitations, challenges, and potential use cases. In this article, we focus on the military domain as a case study and present both a loose enumerative taxonomy of systems captured under the umbrella term ``military AI'', as well as discussion of the challenges of each. In doing so, we highlight that critiques of one (type of) system will not always transfer to other (types of) systems. Building on this, we argue that in order for debates to move forward fruitfully, it is imperative that the discussions be made more precise and that ``AI'' be excised from debates to the extent possible. Researchers, developers, and policy-makers should make clear exactly what systems they have in mind and what possible benefits and risks attend the deployment of those particular systems. While we focus on AI in the military as an exemplar for the overall trends in discussions of ``AI'', the argument's conclusions are broad and have import for discussions of AI across a host of domains.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2602_17729
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Stop Saying "AI"
Wood, Nathan G.
Robbins, Scott
Berodt, Eduardo Zegarra
von Westerholt, Anton Graf
Behrndt, Michelle
Budig, Hauke
Kloock-Schreiber, Daniel
Computers and Society
Artificial Intelligence
Emerging Technologies
Human-Computer Interaction
A.1; I.2; K.4
Across academia, industry, and government, ``AI'' has become central in research and development, regulatory debates, and promises of ever faster and more capable decision-making and action. In numerous domains, especially safety-critical ones, there are significant concerns over how ``AI'' may affect decision-making, responsibility, or the likelihood of mistakes (to name only a few categories of critique). However, for most critiques, the target is generally ``AI'', a broad term admitting many (types of) systems used for a variety of tasks and each coming with its own set of limitations, challenges, and potential use cases. In this article, we focus on the military domain as a case study and present both a loose enumerative taxonomy of systems captured under the umbrella term ``military AI'', as well as discussion of the challenges of each. In doing so, we highlight that critiques of one (type of) system will not always transfer to other (types of) systems. Building on this, we argue that in order for debates to move forward fruitfully, it is imperative that the discussions be made more precise and that ``AI'' be excised from debates to the extent possible. Researchers, developers, and policy-makers should make clear exactly what systems they have in mind and what possible benefits and risks attend the deployment of those particular systems. While we focus on AI in the military as an exemplar for the overall trends in discussions of ``AI'', the argument's conclusions are broad and have import for discussions of AI across a host of domains.
title Stop Saying "AI"
topic Computers and Society
Artificial Intelligence
Emerging Technologies
Human-Computer Interaction
A.1; I.2; K.4
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2602.17729