Microsoft, Amazon, Google join fight to prevent famine, tap AI tech The Japan Times
WASHINGTON – Tech giants Microsoft, Amazon and Google are joining forces with international organizations to help identify and head off famines in developing nations using data analysis and artificial intelligence, a new initiative unveiled Sunday. Rather than waiting to respond to a famine after many lives already have been lost, the tech firms "will use the predictive power of data to trigger funding" to take action before it becomes a crisis, the World Bank and United Nations announced in a joint statement. "The fact that millions of people -- many of them children -- still suffer from severe malnutrition and famine in the 21st century is a global tragedy," World Bank Group President Jim Yong Kim said in a statement. "We are forming an unprecedented global coalition to say, 'no more.' " Last year more than 20 million people faced famine conditions in Nigeria, Somalia, South Sudan and Yemen, while 124 million people currently live in crisis levels of food insecurity, requiring urgent humanitarian assistance for their survival, the agencies said. Over half of them live in areas affected by conflict.
Sep-27-2018, 05:05:01 GMT
- Country:
- Africa
- Middle East > Somalia (0.27)
- Nigeria (0.27)
- South Sudan (0.27)
- Asia
- Indonesia > Bali (0.07)
- Middle East > Yemen (0.27)
- Africa
- Industry:
- Banking & Finance (0.85)
- Information Technology (0.56)
- Technology: