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Britain's AI, fintech, and genetics startups have had the 'wind knocked out of their sails' by Brexit

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Britain's fintech, artificial intelligence, and genetics startups have been going great guns recently, but Brexit has killed their momentum, according to a London startup CEO who is now considering whether he should open up additional offices outside the UK. Damian Kimmelman, CEO and founder of business information platform DueDil, told Business Insider: "I think the UK has three massive centres of excellence. "Those aren't going to go away very quickly but the wind has been knocked out of their sails." Companies like TransferWise, DeepMind, and Sophia Genetics have helped the UK to build a reputation as one of Europe's leading technology hubs. Kimmelman added: "In order to do something that really stimulates the tech economy, we have to look at this [Brexit] as an opportunity." The entrepreneur believes the UK should "be bold" and rip out the old financial services infrastructure before introducing a new one. "Use technologies such as blockchain and make that more pervasive," he said. "Other countries won't have the goal to take such audacious measures.


AI Beats a Fighter Pilot in a Virtual Dogfight

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An artificial intelligence programmed to fly fighter jets has defeated several air combat experts in a simulation, according to a paper published in the Journal of Defense Management. The AI, called ALPHA, was built by Psibernetix, Inc. with assistance from the Air Force Research Laboratory. ALPHA's purpose was to be better than highly trained fighter pilots, and so far it appears up to the task. The AI has gone up against its predecessor, the AFRL's previous AI program, and a series of human opponents. It emerged victorious each time. One of those opponents, Gene Lee, is a retired Air Force colonel with extensive flight experience both as a pilot and an instructor.


What if we used artificial intelligence to run government offices?

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I visited my local health-insurance office a few months ago. After entering the building, I was welcomed into a long and dark corridor, full of nervous people carrying bloated folders. The atmosphere was gloomy, and it was obvious that no one wanted to be there. After about 30 minutes I realized why: During that time, the line had barely moved, and it took me the better part of the day to reach a clerk. As a result, I was late for two other errands I had planned.


Q&A: Michael Horowitz on banning killer, artificially intelligent robots

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Editor's note: Dallas police actively guided an explosive-laden robot to kill gunman Micah Johnson when negotiations broke down after he opened fire on police and others July 7. This interview on Think -- which was recorded before the ambush took place -- focuses on the questions raised by computers and robots programmed to kill without human supervision. You may have seen it earlier this year when a company called Boston Dynamics posted a video of a humanoid robot that can walk on two legs, even over uneven terrain. Seeing a machine balance on bumpy, snowy ground in a New England forest is mesmerizing. But watching the robot get knocked to the ground by a human tester, then get up all by itself and keep going is somehow profoundly unsettling.


Opinion: Another attack in France, another round of Muslim-bashing

Los Angeles Times

I'm Paul Thornton, The Times' letters editor, and it is Saturday, July 16. How much more terrorism can France take? After yet another attack in that country -- this time in Nice, where a driver plowed a truck into a crowd of Bastille Day revelers -- at least 84 people are dead and authorities are busy gathering evidence to determine how it happened. But in the United States, some talking heads seem to possess answers that French investigators have yet to produce. Newt Gingrich, for example, called for government monitoring of mosques, a recommendation that earned him the scorn of The Times' editorial board: In the face of such a threat, people need leaders adept at analyzing data and thinking creatively about intelligence gathering and risk reduction.


Mars 2020 Mission: NASA's Life-Hunting Rover Passes 'Major Development Milestone,' Design And Construction To Begin Soon

International Business Times

NASA plans to send its next rover to Mars in the summer of 2020, so that it arrives on the red planet in February 2021, the space agency said Friday. The "Mars 2020" rover, which borrows a lot of its design features from its wildly successful predecessor Curiosity, has cleared an extensive review process and is now ready to enter the final design and construction phase. "The Mars 2020 rover is the first step in a potential multi-mission campaign to return carefully selected and sealed samples of Martian rocks and soil to Earth," Geoffrey Yoder, acting associate administrator of NASA's Science Mission Directorate in Washington, said in a statement. "This mission marks a significant milestone in NASA's Journey to Mars -- to determine whether life has ever existed on Mars, and to advance our goal of sending humans to the red planet." Mars, despite its inhospitable climate and heavily irradiated surface that would kill humans in a matter of minutes, has been a source of unending fascination for scientists and science fiction writers alike.


Losing Control: The Dangers of Killer Robots

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New technology could lead humans to relinquish control over decisions to use lethal force. As artificial intelligence advances, the possibility that machines could independently select and fire on targets is fast approaching. Fully autonomous weapons, also known as "killer robots," are quickly moving from the realm of science fiction toward reality. The unmanned Sea Hunter gets underway. At present it sails without weapons, but it exemplifies the move toward greater autonomy.


ASU researcher creates system to control robots with the brain

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A researcher at Arizona State University has discovered how to control multiple robotic drones using the human brain. A controller wears a skull cap outfitted with 128 electrodes wired to a computer. If the controller moves a hand or thinks of something, certain areas light up. "I can see that activity from outside," said Panagiotis Artemiadis (pictured above), director of the Human-Oriented Robotics and Control Lab and an assistant professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering in the School for Engineering of Matter, Transport and Energy in the Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering. "Our goal is to decode that activity to control variables for the robots."


6 Terminator Robots Google Is Developing Alongside Its Artificial Intelligence Program

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A quick visit to the page of Boston Dynamics, a subsidiary of Google, reveals the typical, flowery PR flack pleasantry that is one of the cancers of our age. Our mission is to build the most advanced robots on Earth, with remarkable mobility, agility, dexterity and speed. Surely they're developing robots that will help mankind, right? But if you look at the videos of what they're actually developing, it's easy to see how this type of machinery could soon have frightening military and police applications. Imagine a line of these coming at you, armed with weapons.


What's Next for Artificial Intelligence

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The traditional definition of artificial intelligence is the ability of machines to execute tasks and solve problems in ways normally attributed to humans. Some tasks that we consider simple--recognizing an object in a photo, driving a car--are incredibly complex for AI. Machines can surpass us when it comes to things like playing chess, but those machines are limited by the manual nature of their programming; a 30 gadget can beat us at a board game, but it can't do--or learn to do--anything else. This is where machine learning comes in. Show millions of cat photos to a machine, and it will hone its algorithms to improve at recognizing pictures of cats.