bigger impact
AI could have bigger impact on UK than Industrial Revolution, says Dowden
Artificial intelligence could have a more significant impact on Britain than the Industrial Revolution, the deputy prime minister has said, but warned it could be used by hackers to access sensitive information from the government. Oliver Dowden said AI could speed up productivity and perform boring aspects of jobs. "This is a total revolution that is coming," Dowden told the Times. "It's going to totally transform almost all elements of life over the coming years, and indeed, even months, in some cases. "It is much faster than other revolutions that we've seen and much more extensive, whether that's the invention of the internal combustion engine or the Industrial Revolution." Dowden said AI would allow for faster future decision-making by governments. Asylum claim applications processed by the Home Office are already using AI, and it could even be used in reducing paperwork that goes into ministerial red boxes. "The thing that AI right now does really well, it takes massive amounts of information from datasets in different places and enables you to get to a point where you can make decisions," he said. "Ministers are never going to outsource to AI the making of decisions." But he warned AI could be harnessed by terrorists to expand knowledge on dangerous material or conduct widespread hacking operations in the wake of such attacks against the Electoral Commission and the Police Service of Northern Ireland. The details of more than 10,000 officers and staff at the Police Service of Northern Ireland were published online for a number of hours on Tuesday, after an "industrial-scale breach of data". Dowden said: "You can shortcut hacking by AI.
Biggest myths Of AI
Elon Musk is terrified about humanity creating sentient AI like in the Terminator and The Matrix movies. What other myths exist about AI? And what are our biggest hopes on AI's promises? We asked these questions to actual AI experts, and this is how they responded. "The notion that AI will be so smart that it will take over our lives. At the end of the day, AI is just a tool. Pretty much like the shovel or kitchen knife, it can be used both in good ways and bad ways. But what we shouldn't forget is that the responsibility will always be with humans. So if an AI goes wrong, we have to find the people behind it and punish them, and not necessarily the technology on the front."
Finland is challenging the entire world to understand AI by offering a completely free online course - initiative got 1 % of the Finnish population to study the basics University of Helsinki
Finnish technology firm Reaktor and the University of Helsinki joined forces to educate people on AI for free. The institutions combined to develop an online course to teach the basics of AI to anyone interested in the technology. Reaktor and the University also challenged organizations to train their staff in AI, so far over 200 organisations have pledged to do so โ including banks, telecoms, and healthcare organizations. Almost 90 000 students have signed up for the course since it began in May. While popular with Finns, the course is already seeing strong demand globally, attracting students from over 80 different countries.
Former Cisco CEO Says AI Will Have Bigger Impact Than The Internet
John Chambers, founder and chief executive officer of JC2 Ventures LLC, stands for a photograph... [ ] following a Bloomberg Technology Television interview in San Francisco, California, U.S. John Chambers, who just turned 70, prefers to take any stage at a run. In his tech trendy uniform--blue blazer, designer jeans, checked shirt, and blue boat shoes--he still exudes the physical energy of his successful tenure as CEO at Cisco Systems, which he grew from an annual revenue of $2.2 billion in 1995 to $49 billion in 2015 when he stepped down. Today Chambers runs his own boutique investment firm, JC2 Partners, in Palo Alto, California. He prefers to call himself a mentor to startup CEOs rather than a venture capitalist. When he's not in Silicon Valley he can often be found in India, where he advises Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government on digital transformation and the economy.
Former Cisco CEO Says AI Will Have Bigger Impact Than The Internet
John Chambers, founder and chief executive officer of JC2 Ventures LLC, stands for a photograph following a Bloomberg Technology Television interview in San Francisco, California, U.S. John Chambers, who just turned 70, prefers to take any stage at a run. In his tech trendy uniform--blue blazer, designer jeans, checked shirt, and blue boat shoes--he still exudes the physical energy of his successful tenure as CEO at Cisco Systems, which he grew from an annual revenue of $2.2 billion in 1995 to $49 billion in 2015 when he stepped down. Today Chambers runs his own boutique investment firm, JC2 Partners, in Palo Alto, California. He prefers to call himself a mentor to startup CEOs rather than a venture capitalist. When he's not in Silicon Valley he can often be found in India, where he advises Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government on digital transformation and the economy.
How China is winning the AI race, one real-life application at a time nexxworks
Andrew Ng has called it the "new electricity" while Google CEO Sundar Pichai even went beyond that: "artificial intelligence is going to have a bigger impact on the world than some of the most ubiquitous innovations in history", like electricity (sorry Andrewโฆ) and even fire. So, I feel pretty confident to state that AI will lie at the basis of the (re-)development of business, and even society in general. If the world wide web built the substructure of the age of networks and disruption, then AI will drive the same type of revolution in the cognitive age. Google, Apple, Facebook, Amazon, Alibaba, IBM: everyone is racing to get a piece of that very delectable and rich pie. But who will win the race?
AI is hyped, but big data, social determinants will have a bigger impact
The shift to value-based care often has C-suite executives wondering how best to support the transition, while ensuring a solid return on investment in the long term. And the key to improving care value is to ensure an organization has the right tools to support patients throughout the care cycle. To Sheela Ramamurthy, VirtualHealth chief client officer, organizations need to focus on the most vulnerable care populations to make the biggest impact. And while there's a lot of hype around artificial intelligence and robotics, the tools that run in the background will make the greatest impact on those care populations. "Solutions that bring data together to address whole-person care not only bridge gaps in both care and services, but help patients stay healthy and out of the hospital or emergency room," said Ramamurthy. "Actionable insights provided through care management technology help ensure patients with the greatest needs get timely access to services."
AI will have bigger impact than social media: CMOs
Artifical intelligence is set to transform the marketing and communications world even more than social media has, according to 55% of CMOs surveyed by Weber Shandwick across five markets. The agency's latest study examines current consumer knowledge and attitudes toward AI in the US, UK, Brazil, China and Canada. Of the 150 senior executives surveyed, 68% said their brand is currently selling, using or planning for business in the AI era. Moreover, nearly six in 10 believe that within the next five years, companies will need to compete in the AI space to succeed. Weber Shandwick also polled 2,100 consumers across the five markets, and found that Chinese consumers (31%) report having the strongest knowledge of AI, while UK consumers report the weakest (10%).
Automation will have a bigger impact on jobs in smaller cities
The robot takeover will start in the smaller cities. Towns and small cities have a smaller proportion of jobs that will be resilient to automation than larger urban centres, according to a new study. By looking at the jobs that are most susceptible to automation and their distribution across different US cities, Iyad Rahwan at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Media Lab and his team have found a trend between the size of a city and the impact we should expect artificial intelligence and robots to have on human workers. Roughly speaking, cities with fewer than 100,000 inhabitants are more at risk. The East Coast cities are full of jobs that should be resilient to automation. Washington DC, for example, has many government-related roles that are hard to automate, and New York, with its population of 8.5 million, is able to support many specialist jobs too.
AI will have bigger impact than social media: CMOs
Artifical intelligence is set to transform the marketing and communications world even more than social media has, according to 55 percent of CMOs surveyed by Weber Shandwick across five markets. The agency's latest study examines current consumer knowledge and attitudes toward AI in the US, UK, Brazil, China and Canada. Of the 150 senior executives surveyed, 68 percent said their brand is currently selling, using or planning for business in the AI era. Moreover, nearly six in 10 believe that within the next five years, companies will need to compete in the AI space to succeed. Weber Shandwick also polled 2,100 consumers across the five markets, and found that Chinese consumers (31 percent) report having the strongest knowledge of AI, while UK consumers report the weakest (10 percent).