O'Reilly AI Conference: 12 Observations About Artificial Intelligence

#artificialintelligence 

At the inaugural O'Reilly AI conference, 66 artificial intelligence practitioners and researchers from 39 organizations presented the current state-of-AI: From chatbots and deep learning to self-driving cars and emotion recognition to automating jobs and obstacles to AI progress to saving lives and new business opportunities. There is no better place to imbibe the most up-to-date tech zeitgeist than at an O'Reilly Media event as has been proven again and again ever since the company put together the first Web-related meeting (WWW Wizards Workshop in July 1993). The conference was organized by Ben Lorica and Roger Chen, with Peter Norvig and Tim O'Reilly acting as honorary program chairs. Here's a summary of what I heard there, embellished with a few references to recent AI news and commentary: In contrast to traditional software, explained Peter Norvig, Director of Research at Google, "what is produced [by machine learning] is not code but more or less a black box--you can peak in a little bit, we have some idea of what's going on, but not a complete idea." Tim O'Reilly recently wrote in "The great question of the 21st century: Whose black box do you trust?": Because many of the algorithms that shape our society are black boxes… because they are, in the world of deep learning, inscrutable even to their creators – [the] question of trust is key.

Duplicate Docs Excel Report

Title
None found

Similar Docs  Excel Report  more

TitleSimilaritySource
None found