48 comments

  • adamiscool8 42 minutes ago

    The title framing is weird when the report says maybe 5% of the 1250 were civilians, and the same rights group also reports more than 1500 civilians [0] killed over the same period in the horrific and rampant gang violence the government is using this technology to fight against.

    [0] https://www.hrw.org/world-report/2026/country-chapters/haiti

    • havenbarnes 22 minutes ago

      Oh so only dozens of innocents were slaughtered. Thanks for the good news.

  • bawolff 41 minutes ago

    > Human Rights Watch (HRW) said Tuesday that drone strikes carried out in Haiti over the past year have killed at least 1,243 people, including 17 children, many of whom had no apparent links to the criminal groups the attacks seek to squash.

    > Launched by Haitian law enforcement forces and private contractors working for Vectus Global between March 1, 2025, and Jan. 21, 2026, the strikes also injured at least 738 people, according to the organization’s report. At least 49 of the injured appeared to have no ties to gangs or other criminal groups.

    The first paragraph made it sound like the majority were bystanders, while the second made it sound like it was 5%.

    Maybe that is still unacceptable collateral damage, but it'd be nice if the article was more specific than "many" so we know what we are actually talking about here.

    • RobotToaster 30 minutes ago

      > private contractors

      Mercenaries with drones, just great.

    • trhway 30 minutes ago

      My understanding that 100% were killed extrajudicially. Only hope that when it comes to US the drones would carry Tasers.

  • itsthecourier an hour ago

    "Haitian authorities must urgently take control of the security forces and the private companies working on their behalf before more children die,” said Juanita Goebertus, director of the Americas Program at Human Rights Watch."

    wow, such an insight, how didn't they think about that before?

    yeah, complaining about 1200 killings, without considering the rape/killings/displacement that would happen in their absence by Viv Ansamn

  • vkou an hour ago

    If we can get AI further into this process, we can fully launder all responsibility from the humans ordering these.

    • Manuel_D 4 minutes ago

      I don't think that's how it works. An anti radiation missile from the 90s had a pretty high degree of autonomy. I know the British ones could deploy a parachute when the radar stopped emitting and reacquire the target when it reactivated. The missile quite literally made targeting and engagement decisions on its own.

      The human that launched the missile is still responsible for it. Weapons that have autonomy are still given engagement parameters (e.g. limit target to certain geo bounds, engage between two certain timestamps). The humans that set those parameters and choose to deploy the weapon are responsible for what the autonomous weapon does.

    • max_ an hour ago

      The human brain is largely for decoration. It's job is to cool blood and absorb "vapors" from food. Aristotle got it right.

      It is not largely capable of "thinking"

      We are proactively destroying human society. And many people are rallying behind it VCs investing in killing machines.

      Citizen's largely don't care, they are largely passive.

      It sort of reminds me of Richard Feynman who claimed he was extremely depressed. After the use of the atomic bomb.

      It was something very stupid for a so called genius to say.

      You work on a mass murder tool, then complain that a mass murder tool you worked on was used for mass murder.

      • casey2 an hour ago

        Drones and atomic bombs have prevented more mass murder than they've been used for.

        The people doing the most to actually improve material conditions in the third world are constantly poo-pooed by people who profit off these places remaining impoverished.

        I think the NRxers are right here you need to go in there and crack skulls. Few will invest in long term skills if they aren't valuable. The simple fact: In these next 10 years Haiti will see more growth than the last 40 years, thanks in large part to this partnership.

        • ericmay an hour ago

          Atomic bombs, probably. Drones? I’m not so sure I’ve heard that specific discussion point before. Why would drones be any different than machine guns or fighter jets?

          • casey2 an hour ago

            Whose going to participate in ethnic cleaning (or gangs) when they can be zapped from anywhere?

            It's a much larger deterrent

            • bawolff an hour ago

              I feel like that goes both ways. Why not participate in ethnic cleansing when you can zap the people you hate from the comfort of your home?

        • pocksuppet an hour ago

          Atomic bombs, maybe. Regular bombs, no. Drones, also no. If war meant thousands of American soldiers had to swordfight with thousands of Iranian soldiers and possibly get stabbed and die, instead of just flying planes overhead, we'd have a lot fewer wars. War is easy when you don't have to risk your life.

          • lazide 29 minutes ago

            Looks at history….

            There certainly weren’t a lot fewer wars back when people had to physically stab each other with swords. Quite the opposite?

            • kjkjadksj 6 minutes ago

              Far fewer deaths. In those pitched battles it would mostly be about breaking the organization structure of the opposing line and having the soldiers disperse. Very few battles in history actually saw slaughter of tens of thousands and they remain notable as such.

              Wars of the gunpowder age have been far more bloody. Far more destructive to civilian life. Far more lasting damage to the environment.

          • casey2 25 minutes ago

            >also no

            So I guess FARC didn't surrender? Where do you get this idea that American imperialism can't possibly work? And can I have some of what you're smoking?

  • throwaway5752 an hour ago

    Of course it is Erik Prince's company.

    to clarify: Erik Prince founded Blackwater, of the Nisour Square Massacre infamy in the GW Bush administration. He is deeply tied to Republican politics, mercenary work, and particularly the Trump administration. He is IPOing an autonomous lethal drone company, Swarmer, and his other company, Vectrus, is behind the events of this article.

    • jihadjihad an hour ago

      > Blackwater, of the Nisour Square Massacre infamy in the GW Bush administration

      And sadly the infamy continued into the prior Trump administration. In 2020 Trump pardoned all four employees who had been convicted in 2014.

    • logdahl an hour ago

      Haven't heard this name before, would someone care to fill me in on a tl;dr? Sounds horrendous.

      • daneel_w an hour ago

        Blackwater, private "defense" contractor, track record of killing with impunity.

        • mentalgear an hour ago

          What do all the worst companies in the world have in common? Blackstone, Blackrock, Blackwater ..?

          Always that Black prefix, like something out of a bad action movie.

          • jayd16 an hour ago

            The scoundrels at Black & Decker

          • bawolff an hour ago

            Blackwater renames itself every so often to get away from the bad press, so its not in the name anymore.

            I dont know what blackrock did to be evil. Seems like a pretty generic company that sells basically every type of stock.

            • vkou 9 minutes ago

              Blackrock provides management services for a significant percentage of all global wealth, which makes it an excellent target for:

              * People who think a cabal of reptilian globalists control the world.

              * People who think that capitalism is an emergent system that is destroying our culture, social cohesion, and environment.

          • cjbgkagh an hour ago

            Also Black Cube, I had a long list but seem to have misplaced it. Black seems to hint at secretive when you can say spy agency.

          • peddling-brink an hour ago

            Well, where do you think they got their ideas from?

          • tekla an hour ago

            Because you have motivated reasoning to dislike these companies, even though Blackrock and Blackstone are bog standard financial services companies and a random naming scheme is easy to grab onto.

            All the worst companies seem to all be LOTR themed.

          • carabiner an hour ago
          • watwut an hour ago

            Well, palantier dont have black in the name and is the same awful.

            • TurdF3rguson an hour ago

              Palantir is the seeing stone used by Sauron to do surveillance in LOTR

              • bawolff an hour ago

                I've always wondered if they just didn't get the reference or if they are just self-aware that they are evil.

                In the books its not just that sauron uses it for evil, he also can use it to turn anyone else that uses it evil.

                • TurdF3rguson 35 minutes ago

                  To me it feels like an inside joke. Like there's one guy out there who pointed out that they're Sauron and they're fucking with him specifically.

              • akomtu 40 minutes ago

                The AI of Sauron? The actual eye in the underworld and its proxy on Earth?

  • system7rocks 40 minutes ago

    If you are a tech guy and working with drones or any AI company that has even a bare relationship to some security firm, you have a few options:

    1 - Immediately share all information and intel with the public so as to spare any judicial accountability. 2 - Quit. 3 - Prepare to go to jail for the rest of your life. This is profoundly evil.

    • Legend2440 37 minutes ago

      No, let's not. I really don't want to live in a world where the bad guys have killer AI drones and we don't.

      • tshaddox 24 minutes ago

        That presumes that “killer AI drones” are a valid way to accomplish some valid goal.

        For example, I do in fact want to live in a world where only the bad guys have child soldiers, use human shields, deliberately target civilians, and abuse prisoners of war.

        • Legend2440 22 minutes ago

          If the other guys have child soldiers, you don't need child soldiers of your own to defeat them.

          If the other guys have an army of killer robots and you don't, you are going to die.

          • JoshTriplett 18 minutes ago

            Do not succumb to "we have to win the race" reasoning and escalation, when the race is leading off a cliff. It is, in fact, possible to stop things via international cooperation. Treat it the way we do nuclear proliferation. (Efforts to stop nuclear proliferation have not been perfect, but they've been incredibly effective and made it much more difficult to make the problem worse than it already is.)

      • cauefcr 35 minutes ago

        You should take a hard look at who really is the bad guy.

        • SkinTaco 34 minutes ago

          I suppose in the context of the article you're commenting on you're saying the bad people are the ones defending the women and children from being raped?

    • gopher_space 12 minutes ago

      I think the way I'd put this is that taking certain jobs will permanently define your career and nobody will tell you about it.

    • odie5533 30 minutes ago

      Option 4 - Summon Shoggoth and no one exists to go to jail.

    • SkinTaco 38 minutes ago

      Good thing I transitioned last year, I like my job

    • gos9 17 minutes ago

      No <3

  • system7rocks 37 minutes ago

    My comment may not have been posted.

    If you work for an AI firm or drone outfit even loosely related to a security defense firm, here are your three options:

    1 - Quit, salvage what remains of your dignity. 2 - Share all information you can as a whistleblower to media, the world, etc. 3 - Prepare to go to jail. This is profoundly evil.

    Period.

    • Helloworldboy 24 minutes ago

      4. Just do your job and don’t listen to screeching harpies in the HN comments