global standard
Unesco adopts global standards on 'wild west' field of neurotechnology
The Unesco standards define a new category of data, 'neural data', and suggest guidelines governing its protection. The Unesco standards define a new category of data, 'neural data', and suggest guidelines governing its protection. Unesco adopts global standards on'wild west' field of neurotechnology UN body's recommendations driven by AI advances and proliferation of consumer-oriented neurotech devices It is the latest move in a growing international effort to put guardrails around a burgeoning frontier - technologies that harness data from the brain and nervous system. Unesco has adopted a set of global standards on the ethics of neurotechnology, a field that has been described as "a bit of a wild west". "There is no control," said Unesco's chief of bioethics, Dafna Feinholz.
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Google DeepMind's AI Weather Forecaster Handily Beats a Global Standard
In September, researchers at Google's DeepMind AI unit in London were paying unusual attention to the weather across the pond. Hurricane Lee was at least 10 days out from landfall--eons in forecasting terms--and official forecasts were still waffling between the storm landing on major Northeast cities or missing them entirely. DeepMind's own experimental software had made a very specific prognosis of landfall much farther north. "We were riveted to our seats," says research scientist Rémi Lam. A week and a half later, on September 16, Lee struck land right where DeepMind's software, called GraphCast, had predicted days earlier: Long Island, Nova Scotia--far from major population centers.
This robot pumps gas for you
Kurt "The Cyberguy" Knutsson speaks on the anticpation of automated gas stations that are already refueling cars in Finland. Do you find filling up your car with gas a chore? How about letting a robot do it for you? A Denmark based company called Autofuel has introduced a new robotic refueling system that can fill up your car without you ever getting out of the comfort of your front seat. CLICK TO GET KURT'S FREE CYBERGUY NEWSLETTER WITH SECURITY ALERTS, QUICK VIDEO TIPS, TECH REVIEWS When you sign up for the Autofuel system, you put in your car details such as make, model and license plate, what kind of fuel you want, and your payment details.
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EU moves closer to passing one of world's first laws governing AI
The EU has taken a major step towards passing one of the world's first laws governing artificial intelligence after its main legislative branch approved the text of draft legislation that includes a blanket ban on police use of live facial recognition technology in public places. The European parliament approved rules aimed at setting a global standard for the technology, which encompasses everything from automated medical diagnoses to some types of drone, AI-generated videos known as deepfakes, and bots such as ChatGPT. MEPs will now thrash out details with EU countries before the draft rules – known as the AI act – become legislation. "AI raises a lot of questions socially, ethically, economically. But now is not the time to hit any'pause button'. On the contrary, it is about acting fast and taking responsibility," said Thierry Breton, the European commissioner for the internal market.
Globally significant' AI Act must recognise those affected by AI
The Ada Lovelace Institute is an independent research institute, based in the UK and Brussels, with a mission to ensure data and AI work for people and society. Centring those affected by AI, Ada recommends enshrining legal rights for complaint and collective action and giving civil society a voice within standards setting. Ada recommends expanding and reshaping the role of risk in the Act. Risk should be based on'reasonably foreseeable' purpose and extended beyond individual rights and safety, to also include systemic and environmental risks. The Ada Lovelace Institute, has today published a series of proposed amendments to the EU AI Act aimed at recognising and empowering those affected by AI, expanding and reshaping the meaning of'risk' and accurately reflecting the nature of AI systems and their lifecycle.
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Our children are growing up with AI: what you need to know
A 2019 study conducted by DataChildFutures found that 46% of participating Italian households had AI-powered speakers, while 40% of toys were connected to the internet. More recent research suggests that by 2023 more than 275 million intelligent voice assistants, such as Amazon Echo or Google Home, will be installed in homes worldwide. As younger generations grow up interacting with AI-enabled devices, more consideration should be given to the impact of this technology on children, their rights and wellbeing. AI-powered learning tools and approaches are often regarded as critical drivers of innovation in the education sector. Often recognized for its ability to improve the quality of learning and teaching, artificial intelligence is being used to monitor students' level of knowledge and learning habits, such as rereading and task prioritization, and ultimately to provide a personalized approach to learning. Knewton is one example of AI-enabled learning software that identifies knowledge gaps and curates education content in line with user needs.
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Our children are growing up with AI: what you need to know
A 2019 study conducted by DataChildFutures found that 46% of participating Italian households had AI-powered speakers, while 40% of toys were connected to the internet. More recent research suggests that by 2023 more than 275 million intelligent voice assistants, such as Amazon Echo or Google Home, will be installed in homes worldwide. As younger generations grow up interacting with AI-enabled devices, more consideration should be given to the impact of this technology on children, their rights and wellbeing. AI-powered learning tools and approaches are often regarded as critical drivers of innovation in the education sector. Often recognized for its ability to improve the quality of learning and teaching, AI is being used to monitor students' level of knowledge and learning habits, such as rereading and task prioritization, and ultimately to provide a personalized approach to learning. Knewton is one example of AI-enabled learning software that identifies knowledge gaps and curates education content in line with user needs.
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Can new UK Hub shape global AI standards?
Hot on the heels of the UK's National AI Strategy - launched in September last year - comes the AI Standards Hub, a new government initiative, proposed in the Strategy, which aims to shape global standards for the technology. Britain's Alan Turing Institute, the London-based AI and data science organization founded in 2015, will lead the pilot, with support from the British Standards Institution (the BSI) and metrology institute the National Physical Laboratory. Three august and widely respected bodies, backed by the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) and the UK's Office for AI, which sits across DCMS and what is still called the Department for Business, Energy, and Industrial Strategy (BEIS), even though the Prime Minister scrapped the Industrial Strategy last year - arguably the one bit of government that had been working. That aside, the move adds some much-needed substance to Whitehall claims of world leadership in AI and the UK being a "science and technology superpower". It does this by seeking to focus the debate on standards and regulation at global scale.
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New UK initiative to shape global standards for Artificial Intelligence
The Alan Turing Institute, supported by the British Standards Institution (BSI) and the National Physical Laboratory (NPL), will pilot a new UK government initiative aiming to shape global technical standards for Artificial Intelligence and expand the country's contribution to the field. The hub is backed by the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) and the Office for AI (OAI). The new AI Standard Hub will create practical tools for businesses, bring the UK's AI community together through a new online platform, and develop educational materials to help organisations contribute, develop and meet global standards. This will help put the UK at the forefront of this rapidly developing area. The Hub is part of the National AI Strategy and will aim to increase UK contribution to development of global AI technical standards.
New UK initiative to shape global standards for Artificial Intelligence
The new AI Standard Hub will create practical tools for businesses, bring the UK's AI community together through a new online platform, and develop educational materials to help organisations develop and benefit from global standards. This will help put the UK at the forefront of this rapidly developing area. The Hub will work to improve the governance of AI, complement pro-innovation regulation and unlock the huge economic potential of these technologies to boost investment and employment now the UK has left the European Union. BSI, the UK National Standards Body, and NPL, the country's national metrology institute, will share their world-class expertise in developing standards and research to deliver the pilot with The Alan Turing Institute, the national institute for data science and AI. The hub is backed by the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) and the Office for AI (OAI).
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