Spectre AI
Spectre AI Incorporated was a private software company that served various government agencies and defense contractors in the early 2000s.
Spectre AI went on to create a suite of agent-based software products that were deployed for various government agencies and defense contractors. In late 2002 the company merged with Next-IT where it continued to operate as a wholly owned subsidiary.
In 2004, the company revealed that it was working on public facing technology and developed the US Army's first AI recruiter, SGT STAR. The project later became controversial, and was the subject of numerous FOIA[4] requests by the Electronic Frontier Foundation over fears that the mechanism was overly invasive, which proved not to be the case.[5]
History
Spectre AI Incorporated was founded by Philip Galland and Robert Hust. Galland, initially the company's primary investor, left his position at Oracle to become the company's CEO. In 2004, He and cofounder Robert Hust (the inventor of the functional presence engine) went on to form Agent Science Technologies, Inc. Next IT subsequently merged with defense contractor Verint Systems.[6]
Spectre AI is no longer operational.
References
- ^ "Spectre AI, Inc : Solutions". 2002-08-02. Archived from the original on 2002-08-02. Retrieved 2021-03-03.
- ^ "The History of Apple's Siri". SRI International. Retrieved 2021-03-03.
- ^ "Proceedings and debates of the 107th Congress, First Session" (PDF). United States of America Congressional Record. 147: 39 of 68. September 13, 2001 – via Congress.gov.
- ^ "Responses to EFF FOIA Request" (PDF). EFF.org.
- ^ EFF, David Maass-. "Everything We Know About the Army's Uncanny Chatbots". Gizmodo. Retrieved 2021-03-03.
- ^ Wenkert, Amarelle (2017-12-21). "Verint Buys Conversational AI Company Next IT". CTECH - www.calcalistech.com. Retrieved 2021-03-03.