automatically delete
Social Media and Artificial Intelligence
The replication of human intelligence functions by machines, particularly computer systems, is known as Artificial Intelligence. In my opinion, the core design of social media platforms do not serve our best interests. Solution: AI should analyze user-posted comments and automatically delete any that are offensive or upsetting. Solution: By analyzing the Shorts, Videos, and Photos that users and sites publish, AI should automatically delete any inappropriate Shorts, Videos, and Photographs while allowing the user to select what he wants to see from a list of preferences. My above ideas could certainly use a lot more expansion and enhancement.
Visual inspection automation using Amazon SageMaker JumpStart
According to Gartner, hyperautomation is the number one trend in 2022 and will continue advancing in future. One of the main barriers to hyperautomation is in areas where we're still struggling to reduce human involvement. Intelligent systems have a hard time matching human visual recognition abilities, despite great advancements in deep learning in computer vision. This is mainly due to the lack of annotated data (or when data is sparse) and in areas such as quality control, where trained human eyes still dominate. Another reason is the feasibility of human access in all areas of the product supply chain, such as quality control inspection on the production line.
No, Alexa won't stop recording you
Alexa, will you stop recording and storing my queries? You won't get a response from Alexa to that one, but we got the straight answer from the man who runs the devices division at Amazon. The company has no plans to stop that practice. Sure, senior vice-president Dave Limp this week announced new privacy controls that would let users opt in to automatically delete all recorded queries either every three or 18 months, but you can't opt-out of the recording process. Every time you ask Alexa a question and awake it with the "Alexa" command, Amazon records the question and archives it, to help it become a better personal assistant.
Some suggestions for Mark Zuckerberg's new AI, Jarvis
Today, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg posted a video of him living his totally normal life with his completely normal family and their newest member, an artificial intelligence system that Zuckerberg is calling Jarvis. In the video, Jarvis (voiced by the actor Morgan Freeman) helps Zuckerberg wake up, get dressed with a cannon that shoots him one of his signature grey t-shirts, and eat dry toast. A little strangely, the AI also chats to his baby daughter in Mandarin when no one is watching. At the end of the video, Zuckerberg asks viewers for some suggestions of new features for Jarvis. We had a few, so we figured we'd put them here instead: We at Quartz were impressed with your gumption to build your own AI assistant for your home, especially when Google and Amazon already have such useful products on the market that do the same thing.