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Dual-use technology

In politics, diplomacy and export control, dual-use items refer to goods, software and technology that can be used for both civilian and military applications.[1]

Unimog trucks are an example of a dual-use good used in both civil and military contexts.

More generally speaking, dual-use can also refer to any goods or technology which can satisfy more than one goal at any given time. Thus, expensive technologies that would otherwise benefit only civilian commercial interests can also be used to serve military purposes if they are not otherwise engaged, such as the Global Positioning System.

The "dual-use dilemma" was first noted with the discovery of the process for synthesizing and mass-producing ammonia which revolutionized agriculture with modern fertilizers but also led to the creation of chemical weapons during World War I. The dilemma has long been known in chemistry and physics, and has led to international conventions and treaties, including the Chemical Weapons Convention and the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons.[2]

Drones edit

UAVs are considered to be a challenge for military. No drone zones are areas where drones or unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) cannot be operated.[3][4][5][6][7]

Missiles edit

 
Neptune cruise missile launch

Originally developed as weapons during the Cold War, the United States and the Soviet Union spent billions of dollars developing rocket technology which could carry humans into space (and eventually to the Moon). The development of this peaceful rocket technology paralleled the development of intercontinental ballistic missile technology; and was a way of demonstrating to the other side the potential of one's own rockets.

Those who seek to develop ballistic missiles may claim that their rockets are for peaceful purposes; for example, for commercial satellite launching or scientific purposes. However, even genuinely peaceful rockets may be converted into weapons and provide the technological basis to do so.

Within peaceful rocket programs, different peaceful applications can be seen as having parallel military roles. For example, the return of scientific payloads safely to earth from orbit would indicate re-entry vehicle capability and demonstrating the ability to launch multiple satellites with a single launch vehicle can be seen in a military context as having the potential to deploy multiple independently targetable reentry vehicles.

Nuclear edit

Dual-use nuclear technology refers to the possibility of military use of civilian nuclear power technology. Many technologies and materials associated with the creation of a nuclear power program have a dual-use capability, in that several stages of the nuclear fuel cycle allow diversion of nuclear materials for nuclear weapons. When this happens a nuclear power program can become a route leading to the atomic bomb or a public annex to a secret bomb program. The crisis over Iran's nuclear activities is a case in point.[8]

Many UN and US agencies warn that building more nuclear reactors unavoidably increases nuclear proliferation risks.[9] A fundamental goal for American and global security is to minimize the proliferation risks associated with the expansion of nuclear power. If this development is "poorly managed or efforts to contain risks are unsuccessful, the nuclear future will be dangerous".[8] For nuclear power programs to be developed and managed safely and securely, it is important that countries have domestic “good governance” characteristics that will encourage proper nuclear operations and management:[8]

These characteristics include low degrees of corruption (to avoid officials selling materials and technology for their own personal gain as occurred with the A.Q. Khan smuggling network in Pakistan), high degrees of political stability (defined by the World Bank as “likelihood that the government will be destabilized or overthrown by unconstitutional or violent means, including politically-motivated violence and terrorism”), high governmental effectiveness scores (a World Bank aggregate measure of “the quality of the civil service and the degree of its independence from political pressures [and] the quality of policy formulation and implementation”), and a strong degree of regulatory competence.[8]

Artificial intelligence edit

As more advances are made towards artificial intelligence (AI), it garners more and more attention on its capability as a dual-use technology and the security risks it may pose.[10] Artificial intelligence can be applied within many different fields and can be easily integrated throughout current technology's cyberspace.[10][11] With the use of AI, technology has become capable of running multiple algorithms that could solve difficult problems, from detecting anomalies in samples during MRI scans,[11] to providing surveillance of an entire country's residents.[11] Within China's mass surveillance, the government uses AI in order to distinguish citizens with less than satisfactory records among crowds.[12] Every new invention or application made with AI comes with its own set of positive and negative effects.[10] Some claim that, as potential uses for AI grow in number, nations need to start regulating it as a dual-use technology.[10]

Chemical edit

The modern history of chemical weapons can be traced back to the chemical industries of the belligerent nations of World War I, especially that of Germany. Many industrial chemical processes produce toxic intermediary stages, final products, and by-products, and any nation with a chemical industry has the potential to create weaponised chemical agents. Chlorine is a chemical agent found within several household items such as Bleach and provides various benefits with its wide array of applications.[13] However, its gaseous form can also be used as a chemical weapon.[14]

Biological edit

That the July 2007 terrorist attacks in central London and at Glasgow airport may have involved National Health Service medical professionals was a recent wake-up call that screening people with access to pathogens may be necessary. The challenge remains to maintain security without impairing the contributions to progress afforded by research.[15]

Reports from the project on building a sustainable culture in dual-use bioethics suggest that, as a result of perceived changes in both science and security over the past decade, several states and multilateral bodies have underlined the importance of making life scientists aware of concerns over dual-use and the legal obligations underpinning the prevention of biological weapons. One of the key mechanisms that have been identified to achieve this is through the education of life science students, with the objective of building what has been termed a “culture of responsibility”.

At the 2008 Meeting of States Parties to the Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention (BTWC), it was agreed by consensus that: States Parties recognized the importance of ensuring that those working in the biological sciences are aware of their obligations under the convention and relevant national legislation and guidelines...States Parties noted that formal requirements for seminars, modules or courses, including possible mandatory components, in relevant scientific and engineering training programmes and continuing professional education could assist in raising awareness and in implementing the convention.[16]

The World Health Organization in 2010 developed a "guidance document" for what it called "Dual Use Research of Concern" (DURC) in the life sciences, regarding “research that is intended [to] benefit, but which might easily be misapplied to do harm".[17]

Along with several similar stipulations from other states and regional organisations, biosecurity education has become more important. Unfortunately, both the policy and academic literature show that life scientists across the globe are frequently uninformed or underinformed about biosecurity, dual-use, the BTWC and national legislation outlawing biological weapons.[18][19] Moreover, despite numerous declarations by states and multilateral organisations, the extent to which statements at the international level have trickled down to multifaceted activity at the level of scientists remains limited.[20][21]

The US federal government (USG) developed at least two policy document in light of the WHO guidance document on DURC. In March 2012, The "United States Government Policy for Oversight of Life Sciences Dual use Research of Concern" was published, in order to establish regular review by oversight bodies into USG-funded DURC. In September 2014, the "United States Government Policy for Institutional Oversight of Life Sciences Dual Use Research of Concern" was published, in order to identify DURC and mitigate it "at the institutional level" such as universities.[22]

Night vision and thermal imaging edit

Night-vision devices with extraordinary performance characteristics (high gain, specific spectral sensitivity, fine resolution, low noise) are heavily export-restricted by the few states capable of producing them, mainly to limit their proliferation to enemy combatants, but also to slow the inevitable reverse-engineering undertaken by other world powers.

These precision components, such as the image intensifiers used in night vision goggles and the focal plane arrays found in surveillance satellites and thermal cameras, have numerous civil applications which include nature photography, medical imaging, firefighting, and population control of predator species.

Night scenes of wild elephants and rhinos in the BBC nature documentary series Africa were shot on a Lunax Starlight HD camera (a custom-built digital cinema rig encompassing a Generation 3 image intensifier), and recolored digitally.[23]

In the United States, civilians are free to buy and sell American-made night vision and thermal systems, such as those manufactured by defense contractors Harris, L3 Insight, and FLIR Systems, with very few restrictions. However, American night vision owners may not bring the equipment out of the country, sell it internationally, or even invite non-citizens to examine the technology, per International Traffic in Arms Regulations.[24]

Export of American image intensifiers is selectively permitted under license by the United States Department of Commerce and the State Department. Contributing factors in acquiring a license include diplomatic relations with the destination country, number of pieces to be sold, and the relative quality of the equipment itself, expressed using a Figure Of Merit (FOM) score calculated from several key performance characteristics.

Competing international manufacturers (European defense contractor Exosens Group, Japanese scientific instrument giant Hamamatsu Photonics, and Russian state-financed laboratory JSC Katod) have entered the American market through licensed importers. In spite of their foreign origin, re-export of these components outside of the United States is restricted similarly to domestic components.

A 2012 assessment of the sector by the Department of Commerce and Bureau of Industry and Security made the case for relaxing export controls in light of the narrowing performance gap and increased competition internationally,[25] and a review period undertaken by the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls in 2015 introduced much more granular performance definitions.[26]

Other technologies edit

 
PlayStation 2's graphics processor

In addition to obvious and headline-grabbing dual-use technologies there are some less obvious ones, in that many erstwhile peaceful technologies can be used in weapons. One example during the First and Second World War is the role of German toy manufacturers: Germany was one of the leading nations in the production of wind-up toys, and the ability to produce large numbers of small and reliable clockwork motors was converted into the ability to produce shell and bomb fuzes. During its early stages of release, the PlayStation 2 was considered to be a dual-use technology.[27] The gaming console had to receive special import regulations before being shipped towards the U.S. and European markets.[27] This is due to the console's and its included GPU's capability to process high quality images at high speeds, a shared trait with missile guidance systems.[27]

HoloLens 2 edit

 
Microsoft's HoloLens 2

Early 2019, Microsoft announced the HoloLens 2, smart glasses that will allow consumers to experience augmented reality within the real world.[28] However, it was revealed Microsoft made a 479 million dollar deal with the U.S. government.[28][29][30] This contract would have Microsoft create and supply the U.S. Army a separate version of the HoloLens smart glasses called the Integrated Visual Augmentation System (IVAS).[28][29][30] The IVAS would be used to train soldiers, as well as field medics with battlefield experience within a virtual environment.[28][29][30] This version of the HoloLens allowed the soldiers to have a virtual map of their current environment, friendly units' locations, and much more.[28] An anonymous Microsoft employee published an open letter demanding that Microsoft terminate the IVAS contract.[28][29][30] Microsoft president Brad Smith had previously made a public blog post[31] outlining the company's stance on "how technology companies should work with the government, and specifically whether companies should supply digital technology to the military."

Control edit

Most industrial countries have export controls on certain types of designated dual-use technologies, and they are required by a number of treaties as well. These controls restrict the export of certain commodities and technologies without the permission of the government.

In the context of sanctions regimes, dual-use can be construed broadly because there are few things which do not have the potential for both military and civilian uses.[32]

United States edit

The principal agency for investigating violations of dual-use export controls in the United States is the Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) Office of Export Enforcement (OEE).[33] Interagency coordination of export control cases are conducted through the Export Enforcement Coordination Center (E2C2). The International Traffic in Arms Regulations is the US regime that the BIS OEE enforces.

Canada edit

The Canadian legislation to govern the trade in dual-use technology is known as the Export and Imports Permits Act.

European Union edit

The European Union governs dual-use technology through the Control List of Dual Use Items.[34]

International regimes edit

There are several international arrangements among countries which seek to harmonize lists of dual-use (and military) technologies to control. These include the Nuclear Suppliers Group, the Australia Group, which looks at chemical and biological technologies, the Missile Technology Control Regime, which covers delivery systems for weapons of mass destruction, and the Wassenaar Arrangement, which covers conventional arms and dual-use technologies.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Exporting dual-use goods. European Commission (accessed Aug 2022)
  2. ^ Webb, Amy (14 February 2022). "The Next Pandemic Could Start With a Terrorist Attack". The Atlantic. Retrieved 17 February 2022.
  3. ^ Sedletska, Natalie; Savchuk, Maksym; Ovsyaniy, Kyrylo; Schreck, Carl (2022-11-04). "How Western Tech In Iranian Drones Is Helping Russia Wage War On Ukraine". Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. Retrieved 2023-06-08.
  4. ^ "Drones, Ukraine, Russia, Iran, Western technology | Homeland Security Newswire". www.homelandsecuritynewswire.com. 2022-11-05. Retrieved 2023-06-08.
  5. ^ "Weaponized drones". American Civil Liberties Union. Retrieved 2023-06-08.
  6. ^ Bajema, Natasha. "To Protect Against Weaponized Drones, We Must Understand Their Key Strengths - IEEE Spectrum". spectrum.ieee.org. Retrieved 2023-06-08.
  7. ^ Booth, Rebecca Wright,Ivan Watson,Olha Konovalova,Tom (2023-03-16). "Exclusive: Chinese-made drone, retrofitted and weaponized, downed in eastern Ukraine". CNN. Retrieved 2023-06-08.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  8. ^ a b c d Steven E. Miller & Scott D. Sagan (Fall 2009). "Nuclear power without nuclear proliferation?". Dædalus. 138 (4): 7–18. doi:10.1162/daed.2009.138.4.7. S2CID 57568427.
  9. ^ Kristin Shrader-Frechette (19 August 2011). . Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists. Archived from the original on 2012-01-21.
  10. ^ a b c d Pandya, Jayshree. "The Dual-Use Dilemma Of Artificial Intelligence". Forbes. Retrieved 2019-12-07.
  11. ^ a b c Feldstein, Steven. "We Need to Get Smart About How Governments Use AI". Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Retrieved 2019-12-10.
  12. ^ Mozur, Paul (2018-07-08). "Inside China's Dystopian Dreams: A.I., Shame and Lots of Cameras". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2019-12-10.
  13. ^ "Uses, Benefits, and Safety of Chlorine | Chemical Safety Facts". ChemicalSafetyFacts.org. 2014-05-01. Retrieved 2019-12-10.
  14. ^ Taylor, Adam (2018-04-11). "Analysis | Chlorine, sarin or something else? The big questions in the alleged Syrian chemical weapons attack". Washington Post. Retrieved 2019-12-10.
  15. ^ Daniel Cressey (17 August 2007). "Not so secure after all". Nature. 448 (7155): 732–733. Bibcode:2007Natur.448..732C. doi:10.1038/448732a. PMC 7095479. PMID 17700663.
  16. ^ UN (2008) "Report of the Meeting of States Parties", BWC/MSP/2008/5, 12 December 2008.
  17. ^ . World Health Organization. Archived from the original on October 29, 2013. Retrieved 4 February 2021.
  18. ^ Mancini. G & Revill. J (2008) Fostering the Biosecurity Norm: Biosecurity Education for the Next Generation of Life Scientists, November 2008. (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-21. Retrieved 2010-08-20.
  19. ^ Minehata. M and D. Friedman (2009) Biosecurity Education in Israeli Research Universities. Research Report for the Wellcome Trust Project on Building a Sustainable Capacity in Dual Use Bioethics. http://www.brad.ac.uk/acad/sbtwc/dube/publications/Israel_BioSecReport_Final.pdf
  20. ^ Revill, James; Mancini, G.; Minehata, Masamichi; Shinomiya, N. (2009-11-18). "Biosecurity education: surveys from Europe and Japan". Conference: Inter Academy Panel Workshop on Promoting Education on Dual Use Issues in the Life Sciences.
  21. ^ Revill, James (January 2009). "Biosecurity and Bioethics Education: A Case Study of the UK Context". Conference: Research Report for the Wellcome Trust Project on `Building a Sustainable Capacity in Dual Use Bioethics.
  22. ^ "Dual Use Research of Concern (DURC)". The Regents of the University of California. University of California Irvine Office of Research. Retrieved 4 February 2021.
  23. ^ "Meet the BBC Natural History Unit's kit-hacking specialists". Wired UK. 2014-02-06. Retrieved 9 December 2016.
  24. ^ "FAQ". Tactical Night Vision Company. Retrieved 9 December 2016.
  25. ^ "Critical Technology Assessment: Night Vision Focal Plane Arrays, Sensors, and Cameras". bis.doc.gov. US Department of Commerce. Retrieved 9 December 2016.
  26. ^ "Export Control Reform Comes to USML Category XII". Export Law Blog. Retrieved 9 December 2016.
  27. ^ a b c "Sony's High-Tech Playstation2 Will Require Military Export License". Los Angeles Times. 2000-04-17. Retrieved 2019-12-10.
  28. ^ a b c d e f Haselton, Todd (2019-04-06). "How the Army plans to use Microsoft's high-tech HoloLens goggles on the battlefield". CNBC. Retrieved 2019-12-10.
  29. ^ a b c d Charles Riley and Samuel Burke (25 February 2019). "Microsoft CEO defends US military contract that some employees say crosses a line". CNN. Retrieved 2019-12-10.
  30. ^ a b c d News), NBC News (NBC. "Microsoft HoloLens Letter". www.documentcloud.org. Retrieved 2019-12-10.
  31. ^ "Technology and the US military". 26 October 2018.
  32. ^ Davis, Stuart (2023). Sanctions as War: Anti-Imperialist Perspectives on American Geo-Economic Strategy. pp. 27–28. ISBN 978-1-64259-812-4. OCLC 1345216431.
  33. ^ "OEE Home Page".
  34. ^ Servunts, Levon (25 October 2020). "Bombardier Recreational Products suspends delivery of aircraft engines used on military drones". CBC.

External links edit

  • "Biosecurity 101". National Academy of Sciences.
  • from the US Government's Defense Technical Information Center
  • Federation of American Scientists Case Studies in Dual-Use Research
  • University of Bradford Disarmament Research Centre Dual Use Bioethics Homepage.
    • Commission updates EU control list on dual use items (22 October 2014)
  • European Parliament Rapporteur Marietje Schaake on Dual-Use / Surveillance Technology

dual, technology, politics, diplomacy, export, control, dual, items, refer, goods, software, technology, that, used, both, civilian, military, applications, unimog, trucks, example, dual, good, used, both, civil, military, contexts, more, generally, speaking, . In politics diplomacy and export control dual use items refer to goods software and technology that can be used for both civilian and military applications 1 Unimog trucks are an example of a dual use good used in both civil and military contexts More generally speaking dual use can also refer to any goods or technology which can satisfy more than one goal at any given time Thus expensive technologies that would otherwise benefit only civilian commercial interests can also be used to serve military purposes if they are not otherwise engaged such as the Global Positioning System The dual use dilemma was first noted with the discovery of the process for synthesizing and mass producing ammonia which revolutionized agriculture with modern fertilizers but also led to the creation of chemical weapons during World War I The dilemma has long been known in chemistry and physics and has led to international conventions and treaties including the Chemical Weapons Convention and the Treaty on the Non Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons 2 Contents 1 Drones 2 Missiles 3 Nuclear 4 Artificial intelligence 5 Chemical 6 Biological 7 Night vision and thermal imaging 8 Other technologies 8 1 HoloLens 2 9 Control 9 1 United States 9 2 Canada 9 3 European Union 9 4 International regimes 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksDrones editUAVs are considered to be a challenge for military No drone zones are areas where drones or unmanned aircraft systems UAS cannot be operated 3 4 5 6 7 Missiles edit nbsp Neptune cruise missile launch Originally developed as weapons during the Cold War the United States and the Soviet Union spent billions of dollars developing rocket technology which could carry humans into space and eventually to the Moon The development of this peaceful rocket technology paralleled the development of intercontinental ballistic missile technology and was a way of demonstrating to the other side the potential of one s own rockets Those who seek to develop ballistic missiles may claim that their rockets are for peaceful purposes for example for commercial satellite launching or scientific purposes However even genuinely peaceful rockets may be converted into weapons and provide the technological basis to do so Within peaceful rocket programs different peaceful applications can be seen as having parallel military roles For example the return of scientific payloads safely to earth from orbit would indicate re entry vehicle capability and demonstrating the ability to launch multiple satellites with a single launch vehicle can be seen in a military context as having the potential to deploy multiple independently targetable reentry vehicles Nuclear editDual use nuclear technology refers to the possibility of military use of civilian nuclear power technology Many technologies and materials associated with the creation of a nuclear power program have a dual use capability in that several stages of the nuclear fuel cycle allow diversion of nuclear materials for nuclear weapons When this happens a nuclear power program can become a route leading to the atomic bomb or a public annex to a secret bomb program The crisis over Iran s nuclear activities is a case in point 8 Many UN and US agencies warn that building more nuclear reactors unavoidably increases nuclear proliferation risks 9 A fundamental goal for American and global security is to minimize the proliferation risks associated with the expansion of nuclear power If this development is poorly managed or efforts to contain risks are unsuccessful the nuclear future will be dangerous 8 For nuclear power programs to be developed and managed safely and securely it is important that countries have domestic good governance characteristics that will encourage proper nuclear operations and management 8 These characteristics include low degrees of corruption to avoid officials selling materials and technology for their own personal gain as occurred with the A Q Khan smuggling network in Pakistan high degrees of political stability defined by the World Bank as likelihood that the government will be destabilized or overthrown by unconstitutional or violent means including politically motivated violence and terrorism high governmental effectiveness scores a World Bank aggregate measure of the quality of the civil service and the degree of its independence from political pressures and the quality of policy formulation and implementation and a strong degree of regulatory competence 8 Artificial intelligence editMain article Ethics of artificial intelligence As more advances are made towards artificial intelligence AI it garners more and more attention on its capability as a dual use technology and the security risks it may pose 10 Artificial intelligence can be applied within many different fields and can be easily integrated throughout current technology s cyberspace 10 11 With the use of AI technology has become capable of running multiple algorithms that could solve difficult problems from detecting anomalies in samples during MRI scans 11 to providing surveillance of an entire country s residents 11 Within China s mass surveillance the government uses AI in order to distinguish citizens with less than satisfactory records among crowds 12 Every new invention or application made with AI comes with its own set of positive and negative effects 10 Some claim that as potential uses for AI grow in number nations need to start regulating it as a dual use technology 10 Chemical editMain article List of Schedule 3 substances CWC The modern history of chemical weapons can be traced back to the chemical industries of the belligerent nations of World War I especially that of Germany Many industrial chemical processes produce toxic intermediary stages final products and by products and any nation with a chemical industry has the potential to create weaponised chemical agents Chlorine is a chemical agent found within several household items such as Bleach and provides various benefits with its wide array of applications 13 However its gaseous form can also be used as a chemical weapon 14 Biological editSee also Gain of function research That the July 2007 terrorist attacks in central London and at Glasgow airport may have involved National Health Service medical professionals was a recent wake up call that screening people with access to pathogens may be necessary The challenge remains to maintain security without impairing the contributions to progress afforded by research 15 Reports from the project on building a sustainable culture in dual use bioethics suggest that as a result of perceived changes in both science and security over the past decade several states and multilateral bodies have underlined the importance of making life scientists aware of concerns over dual use and the legal obligations underpinning the prevention of biological weapons One of the key mechanisms that have been identified to achieve this is through the education of life science students with the objective of building what has been termed a culture of responsibility At the 2008 Meeting of States Parties to the Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention BTWC it was agreed by consensus that States Parties recognized the importance of ensuring that those working in the biological sciences are aware of their obligations under the convention and relevant national legislation and guidelines States Parties noted that formal requirements for seminars modules or courses including possible mandatory components in relevant scientific and engineering training programmes and continuing professional education could assist in raising awareness and in implementing the convention 16 The World Health Organization in 2010 developed a guidance document for what it called Dual Use Research of Concern DURC in the life sciences regarding research that is intended to benefit but which might easily be misapplied to do harm 17 Along with several similar stipulations from other states and regional organisations biosecurity education has become more important Unfortunately both the policy and academic literature show that life scientists across the globe are frequently uninformed or underinformed about biosecurity dual use the BTWC and national legislation outlawing biological weapons 18 19 Moreover despite numerous declarations by states and multilateral organisations the extent to which statements at the international level have trickled down to multifaceted activity at the level of scientists remains limited 20 21 The US federal government USG developed at least two policy document in light of the WHO guidance document on DURC In March 2012 The United States Government Policy for Oversight of Life Sciences Dual use Research of Concern was published in order to establish regular review by oversight bodies into USG funded DURC In September 2014 the United States Government Policy for Institutional Oversight of Life Sciences Dual Use Research of Concern was published in order to identify DURC and mitigate it at the institutional level such as universities 22 Night vision and thermal imaging editNight vision devices with extraordinary performance characteristics high gain specific spectral sensitivity fine resolution low noise are heavily export restricted by the few states capable of producing them mainly to limit their proliferation to enemy combatants but also to slow the inevitable reverse engineering undertaken by other world powers These precision components such as the image intensifiers used in night vision goggles and the focal plane arrays found in surveillance satellites and thermal cameras have numerous civil applications which include nature photography medical imaging firefighting and population control of predator species Night scenes of wild elephants and rhinos in the BBC nature documentary series Africa were shot on a Lunax Starlight HD camera a custom built digital cinema rig encompassing a Generation 3 image intensifier and recolored digitally 23 In the United States civilians are free to buy and sell American made night vision and thermal systems such as those manufactured by defense contractors Harris L3 Insight and FLIR Systems with very few restrictions However American night vision owners may not bring the equipment out of the country sell it internationally or even invite non citizens to examine the technology per International Traffic in Arms Regulations 24 Export of American image intensifiers is selectively permitted under license by the United States Department of Commerce and the State Department Contributing factors in acquiring a license include diplomatic relations with the destination country number of pieces to be sold and the relative quality of the equipment itself expressed using a Figure Of Merit FOM score calculated from several key performance characteristics Competing international manufacturers European defense contractor Exosens Group Japanese scientific instrument giant Hamamatsu Photonics and Russian state financed laboratory JSC Katod have entered the American market through licensed importers In spite of their foreign origin re export of these components outside of the United States is restricted similarly to domestic components A 2012 assessment of the sector by the Department of Commerce and Bureau of Industry and Security made the case for relaxing export controls in light of the narrowing performance gap and increased competition internationally 25 and a review period undertaken by the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls in 2015 introduced much more granular performance definitions 26 Other technologies edit nbsp PlayStation 2 s graphics processor In addition to obvious and headline grabbing dual use technologies there are some less obvious ones in that many erstwhile peaceful technologies can be used in weapons One example during the First and Second World War is the role of German toy manufacturers Germany was one of the leading nations in the production of wind up toys and the ability to produce large numbers of small and reliable clockwork motors was converted into the ability to produce shell and bomb fuzes During its early stages of release the PlayStation 2 was considered to be a dual use technology 27 The gaming console had to receive special import regulations before being shipped towards the U S and European markets 27 This is due to the console s and its included GPU s capability to process high quality images at high speeds a shared trait with missile guidance systems 27 HoloLens 2 edit nbsp Microsoft s HoloLens 2 Early 2019 Microsoft announced the HoloLens 2 smart glasses that will allow consumers to experience augmented reality within the real world 28 However it was revealed Microsoft made a 479 million dollar deal with the U S government 28 29 30 This contract would have Microsoft create and supply the U S Army a separate version of the HoloLens smart glasses called the Integrated Visual Augmentation System IVAS 28 29 30 The IVAS would be used to train soldiers as well as field medics with battlefield experience within a virtual environment 28 29 30 This version of the HoloLens allowed the soldiers to have a virtual map of their current environment friendly units locations and much more 28 An anonymous Microsoft employee published an open letter demanding that Microsoft terminate the IVAS contract 28 29 30 Microsoft president Brad Smith had previously made a public blog post 31 outlining the company s stance on how technology companies should work with the government and specifically whether companies should supply digital technology to the military Control editMain article Export control Most industrial countries have export controls on certain types of designated dual use technologies and they are required by a number of treaties as well These controls restrict the export of certain commodities and technologies without the permission of the government In the context of sanctions regimes dual use can be construed broadly because there are few things which do not have the potential for both military and civilian uses 32 United States edit The principal agency for investigating violations of dual use export controls in the United States is the Bureau of Industry and Security BIS Office of Export Enforcement OEE 33 Interagency coordination of export control cases are conducted through the Export Enforcement Coordination Center E2C2 The International Traffic in Arms Regulations is the US regime that the BIS OEE enforces Canada edit The Canadian legislation to govern the trade in dual use technology is known as the Export and Imports Permits Act European Union edit The European Union governs dual use technology through the Control List of Dual Use Items 34 International regimes edit There are several international arrangements among countries which seek to harmonize lists of dual use and military technologies to control These include the Nuclear Suppliers Group the Australia Group which looks at chemical and biological technologies the Missile Technology Control Regime which covers delivery systems for weapons of mass destruction and the Wassenaar Arrangement which covers conventional arms and dual use technologies See also editGeneral purpose technology Treaty on the Non Proliferation of Nuclear WeaponsReferences edit Exporting dual use goods European Commission accessed Aug 2022 Webb Amy 14 February 2022 The Next Pandemic Could Start With a Terrorist Attack The Atlantic Retrieved 17 February 2022 Sedletska Natalie Savchuk Maksym Ovsyaniy Kyrylo Schreck Carl 2022 11 04 How Western Tech In Iranian Drones Is Helping Russia Wage War On Ukraine Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty Retrieved 2023 06 08 Drones Ukraine Russia Iran Western technology Homeland Security Newswire www homelandsecuritynewswire com 2022 11 05 Retrieved 2023 06 08 Weaponized drones American Civil Liberties Union Retrieved 2023 06 08 Bajema Natasha To Protect Against Weaponized Drones We Must Understand Their Key Strengths IEEE Spectrum spectrum ieee org Retrieved 2023 06 08 Booth Rebecca Wright Ivan Watson Olha Konovalova Tom 2023 03 16 Exclusive Chinese made drone retrofitted and weaponized downed in eastern Ukraine CNN Retrieved 2023 06 08 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b c d Steven E Miller amp Scott D Sagan Fall 2009 Nuclear power without nuclear proliferation Daedalus 138 4 7 18 doi 10 1162 daed 2009 138 4 7 S2CID 57568427 Kristin Shrader Frechette 19 August 2011 Cheaper safer alternatives than nuclear fission Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists Archived from the original on 2012 01 21 a b c d Pandya Jayshree The Dual Use Dilemma Of Artificial Intelligence Forbes Retrieved 2019 12 07 a b c Feldstein Steven We Need to Get Smart About How Governments Use AI Carnegie Endowment for International Peace Retrieved 2019 12 10 Mozur Paul 2018 07 08 Inside China s Dystopian Dreams A I Shame and Lots of Cameras The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2019 12 10 Uses Benefits and Safety of Chlorine Chemical Safety Facts ChemicalSafetyFacts org 2014 05 01 Retrieved 2019 12 10 Taylor Adam 2018 04 11 Analysis Chlorine sarin or something else The big questions in the alleged Syrian chemical weapons attack Washington Post Retrieved 2019 12 10 Daniel Cressey 17 August 2007 Not so secure after all Nature 448 7155 732 733 Bibcode 2007Natur 448 732C doi 10 1038 448732a PMC 7095479 PMID 17700663 UN 2008 Report of the Meeting of States Parties BWC MSP 2008 5 12 December 2008 Dual Use Research of Concern DURC World Health Organization Archived from the original on October 29 2013 Retrieved 4 February 2021 Mancini G amp Revill J 2008 Fostering the Biosecurity Norm Biosecurity Education for the Next Generation of Life Scientists November 2008 Centrovolta it Informazioni Turistiche PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2011 07 21 Retrieved 2010 08 20 Minehata M and D Friedman 2009 Biosecurity Education in Israeli Research Universities Research Report for the Wellcome Trust Project on Building a Sustainable Capacity in Dual Use Bioethics http www brad ac uk acad sbtwc dube publications Israel BioSecReport Final pdf Revill James Mancini G Minehata Masamichi Shinomiya N 2009 11 18 Biosecurity education surveys from Europe and Japan Conference Inter Academy Panel Workshop on Promoting Education on Dual Use Issues in the Life Sciences Revill James January 2009 Biosecurity and Bioethics Education A Case Study of the UK Context Conference Research Report for the Wellcome Trust Project on Building a Sustainable Capacity in Dual Use Bioethics Dual Use Research of Concern DURC The Regents of the University of California University of California Irvine Office of Research Retrieved 4 February 2021 Meet the BBC Natural History Unit s kit hacking specialists Wired UK 2014 02 06 Retrieved 9 December 2016 FAQ Tactical Night Vision Company Retrieved 9 December 2016 Critical Technology Assessment Night Vision Focal Plane Arrays Sensors and Cameras bis doc gov US Department of Commerce Retrieved 9 December 2016 Export Control Reform Comes to USML Category XII Export Law Blog Retrieved 9 December 2016 a b c Sony s High Tech Playstation2 Will Require Military Export License Los Angeles Times 2000 04 17 Retrieved 2019 12 10 a b c d e f Haselton Todd 2019 04 06 How the Army plans to use Microsoft s high tech HoloLens goggles on the battlefield CNBC Retrieved 2019 12 10 a b c d Charles Riley and Samuel Burke 25 February 2019 Microsoft CEO defends US military contract that some employees say crosses a line CNN Retrieved 2019 12 10 a b c d News NBC News NBC Microsoft HoloLens Letter www documentcloud org Retrieved 2019 12 10 Technology and the US military 26 October 2018 Davis Stuart 2023 Sanctions as War Anti Imperialist Perspectives on American Geo Economic Strategy pp 27 28 ISBN 978 1 64259 812 4 OCLC 1345216431 OEE Home Page Servunts Levon 25 October 2020 Bombardier Recreational Products suspends delivery of aircraft engines used on military drones CBC External links edit Biosecurity 101 National Academy of Sciences U S Department of Commerce Bureau of Industry and Security Militarily Critical Technologies List MCTL from the US Government s Defense Technical Information Center Federation of American Scientists Case Studies in Dual Use Research University of Bradford Disarmament Research Centre Dual Use Bioethics Homepage European Commission List of Dual use items and technologies Commission updates EU control list on dual use items 22 October 2014 European Parliament Rapporteur Marietje Schaake on Dual Use Surveillance Technology Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dual use technology amp oldid 1221235846, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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