| Study #20 | What 
    effect will molecular manufacturing have on military and government 
    capability and planning, considering the implications of arms races and 
    unbalanced development? | 
  
    |  | It has been 
    predicted that a sufficiently advanced and general-purpose molecular 
    manufacturing (MM) technology could have a significant destabilizing effect. 
    This must be explored. | 
  
    | Subquestion | How quickly 
    can new weapons be invented, designed and deployed? | 
  
    | Preliminary answer | Very quickly. (See 
    the previous few studies.) | 
  
    | Subquestion | What new 
    theatres or contexts for conflict will be created? (Outer space, cyberspace, 
    underground, other?) | 
  
    | Preliminary answer | It will become 
    quite important to be able to detect very small devices—perhaps even 
    sub-microscopic devices. Outer space will become much easier to reach. 
    Millionfold increases in computer power will create new opportunities. 
    Extremely large-scale sensor networks, backed by large-scale computers, may 
    make some environments (such as the ocean) less opaque. Living organisms 
    (especially humans) are high-value and perhaps high-resource targets, and 
    may require advanced engineering to monitor and protect without excessive 
    disruption. Data-mining from massive sensor arrays and human transaction 
    monitoring may be crucial; this will probably be limited more by software 
    than by hardware. The sensor networks themselves, and disrupting or hiding 
    from them, may be a focus of conflict, but one that is likely to be won by 
    the sensors (see David Brin, 
    
    The Transparent Society). | 
  
    | Subquestion | To what 
    extent will portable manufacturing allow forces to be autonomous of supply? | 
  
    | Preliminary answer | Manufacturing of 
    just about anything from clothing to missiles should be feasible with only 
    raw materials. Advances in thermal depolymerization technology may allow 
    conversion of local plant matter into feedstock with a relatively small 
    (man-portable) chemical plant. | 
  
    | Subquestion | To what 
    extent will advanced technology allow forces to be remotely or autonomously 
    controlled? | 
  
    | Preliminary answer | Any algorithm that 
    can be run on a supercomputer today will be able to run onboard even a 
    bullet or insect-format robot. This implies rather good image recognition. 
    Also, the ability to field as many UAV or smart dust relays as desired will 
    allow very high-bandwidth networking. Improved robotics, displays, and 
    sensory or even neural interfaces can greatly enhance telepresence. | 
  
    | Subquestion | What impacts 
    will human augmentation (including direct brain interface) have? | 
  
    | Preliminary answer | Unknown at this 
    time, but probably includes significantly improved reaction time, 
    situational awareness, telepresence, teleoperation of robots, fully 
    immersive VR, and enhanced memory/cognition. | 
  
    | Subquestion | What impacts 
    will advanced data gathering and data processing have? | 
  
    | Preliminary answer | A full-coverage 
    sensor network with full storage seems plausible. This would give the 
    ability to see and hear anything from any angle at any time in the present 
    or past (after the network was installed, of course). Image processing 
    should allow tracking of people through time. Data mining based on image 
    processing should allow connections to be found and highlighted (for 
    example, full speech-to-text conversion of all conversations, followed by 
    text searching to determine where the other end of a phone call went). | 
  
    |  | This could greatly 
    surpass DARPA's TIA, and enable DARPA's
    
    LifeLog: "an electronic diary to help the individual more accurately 
    recall and use his or her past experiences to be more effective in current 
    or future tasks." | 
  
    | Subquestion | To what 
    extent will rapidly advancing technology reduce the enemy's predictability? | 
  
    | Preliminary answer | If a full sensor 
    network can be installed, the enemy may be come extremely predictable. 
    However, in the absence of direct sensing, the speed with which new products 
    and new types of weapons can be conceptualized, developed, and deployed 
    argues that it will be very hard to know what the enemy's capability is or 
    will be. | 
  
    | Subquestion | How quickly 
    and effectively can new doctrine be invented or adapted to new capabilities 
    on either side? | 
  
    | Preliminary answer | This is an 
    institutional question. Note that a failure of human institutions will tempt 
    the development of automated or adaptive threat detection and response, 
    comparable to automated computer virus characterization. Note further that 
    such automated response systems could be extremely dangerous. | 
  
    | Subquestion | Will offense 
    or defense be fundamentally stronger? | 
  
    | Preliminary answer | Since this 
    question must be answered for each possible class of weapon, and since MM 
    makes many new classes of weapon possible, it appears that offense will 
    probably win. However, this analysis is shallow; and because of the crucial 
    importance of this question, it should be studied carefully. | 
  
    | Subquestion | How well can 
    military targets be protected? | 
  
    | Preliminary answer | Military targets 
    can be dispersed, miniaturized, hardened with advanced materials, and 
    rebuilt quickly. The main vulnerability will be people, which again argues 
    for automation. | 
  
    | Subquestion | How well can 
    civilian targets be protected? | 
  
    | Preliminary answer | Billions of 
    toxin-carrying insectoid nanobots could fit in a small packing crate. 
    Orbital or UAV-based weapons can be deployed on a large scale. It looks like 
    civilians and civilian property may not be defensible without major 
    lifestyle changes. It's possible that a comprehensive shield could protect 
    against some forms of attack, possibly including nano-scale robots, but 
    long-range high-energy weapons may require impractical amounts of shielding. | 
  
    |  | The alternative 
    is to prevent the deployment of such weapons in the first place, but this 
    would be quite difficult to achieve by any means. A control-freak approach 
    would be hugely oppressive (for the protected civilians as well as 
    non-citizens) and may not be sustainable, and an effective policy-based 
    approach will be difficult to design. | 
  
    | Subquestion | Is an arms race 
    likely to be unstable? | 
  
    | Preliminary answer | Yes. The nuclear 
    arms race was stable for several reasons. In virtually every way, the 
    nano-arms race will be the opposite. | 
  
    | Nuclear weapons 
    are hard to design, hard to build, require easily monitored testing, do 
    indiscriminate and lasting damage, do not rapidly become obsolete, have 
    almost no peaceful use, and are universally abhorred. Nano capability will 
    be easy to build (given a nanofactory), will allow easily concealable 
    testing, will be relatively easy to control and deactivate, would become 
    obsolete very rapidly, almost every design is dual-use, and peaceful and 
    non-lethal (police) use will be common. Nukes are easier to stockpile than 
    to use; nano weapons are the opposite. | 
  
    |  | Also, as
    
    Mark Gubrud pointed out, a deployed rapid-response net would be 
    unstable. (A hair-trigger complex system eventually will suffer a false 
    alarm.) One observer has argued that immune systems are not generally 
    unstable, and humans should be able to do even better. We disagree on three 
    counts. First, humans aren't close to understanding the immune system yet, 
    and we may have to design military systems before we do understand it. 
    Second, what's needed is not very comparable to a biological immune system, 
    so we'll be doing a lot of new engineering that'll be hard either to test or 
    to analyze. Third, the instability that Gubrud analyzed is not from one 
    defensive system reacting to disorganized and localized threats—it's from 
    two defensive systems reacting to each other. The closest analogy from 
    immunology would be graft-vs-host disease, which is a great example of 
    instability. | 
  
    | Subquestion | How hard will it 
    be to recover from a nanotech gap? | 
  
    | Preliminary answer | At the point 
    where a nanofactory or equivalent system is developed, even a few months 
    difference could be unrecoverable. The more advanced side would have access 
    to vastly better computers, and the technology would advance as rapidly as 
    their creativity allowed. There is no obvious plateau in capability that 
    would allow a laggard to catch up. Also, the advanced side would be in a 
    much better position to thwart development in its opponents, with or without 
    all-out war. | 
  
    | Subquestion | Could a non-nano 
    power defend itself against a nano power? | 
  
    | Preliminary answer | No. And even a 
    nuclear power might not be able to deter a nano power: aerospace superiority 
    (with rapid prototyping and cheap manufacturing) could make it much easier 
    to build an effective missile shield. | 
  
    | Subquestion | How could 
    governments use molecular manufacturing in their own countries? | 
  
    | Preliminary answer | This deserves a 
    whole study of its own. Abusive and oppressive governments could become far 
    worse. Any country could modernize (and militarize) very fast, depending on 
    how much expertise it can buy or train locally. MM could enhance national 
    character, for example: Americans could become more independent / off-grid 
    (which could reduce vulnerability to terrorism); others could become more 
    socially linked through high-bandwidth connection and data-sharing; there'll 
    be plenty of opportunity for both laziness and productivity. | 
  
    | Conclusion | Military practice and planning will have to change a lot. An unstable 
    arms race looks like a definite possibility. Substantial innovation will be 
    required to even begin to protect civilians. Development of molecular 
    manufacturing may have a crucial impact on national strength. 
 | 
  
    | Other studies | 1. 
    Is 
    mechanically guided chemistry a viable basis for a manufacturing technology? 2. To what extent is molecular manufacturing counterintuitive and 
    underappreciated in a way that causes underestimation of its importance?
 3. What is 
    the performance and potential of diamondoid machine-phase chemical 
    manufacturing and products?
 4. What is the performance and potential of biological programmable 
    manufacturing and products?
 5. What is the performance and potential of nucleic acid 
    manufacturing and products?
 6. What other chemistries and options should be studied?
 7. What 
    applicable sensing, manipulation, and fabrication tools exist?
 8. What will be required to develop diamondoid machine-phase chemical 
    manufacturing and products?
 9. What will be required to develop biological programmable 
    manufacturing and products?
 10. What will be required to develop nucleic acid manufacturing and 
    products?
 11. How rapidly will the cost of development decrease?
 12. How could an effective development program be structured?
 13. What is 
    the probable capability of the manufacturing system?
 14. How capable will the products be?
 15. What will the products cost?
 16. How rapidly could products be designed?
 17. Which 
    of today's products will the system make more accessible or cheaper?
 18. What new products will the system make accessible?
 19. What impact will the system have on production and distribution?
 
 21. What effect will this have on macro- and microeconomics?
 22. How can proliferation and use of nanofactories and their products 
    be limited?
 23. What effect will this have on policing?
 24. What beneficial or desirable effects could this have?
 25. What effect could this have on civil rights and liberties?
 26. What are the disaster/disruption scenarios?
 27. What effect could this have on geopolitics?
 28. What policies toward development of molecular manufacturing does 
    all this suggest?
 29. What policies toward administration of 
    molecular manufacturing does all this suggest?
 30. How can appropriate policy be made and implemented?
 
 | 
  
    | Studies should begin 
    immediately. | The situation is 
    extremely urgent. The stakes are unprecedented, and the world is unprepared. 
    The basic findings of these studies should be verified as rapidly as 
    possible (months, not years). Policy preparation and planning for 
    implementation, likely including a crash development program, should begin 
    immediately. |