intelligent space
Envisioning the Intelligent World 2030 - CRN - India
The next decade will be a journey towards building an intelligent world during which we will witness dreams of the past turn into inventions of the day and features of science fiction emerge as daily life utilities. Exploration and innovation will be the driving force of this new future. Our quality of life at home and work will be greatly improved. Our lives in 2030 will face marked improvements including more plentiful food, larger living spaces, renewable energy, and greater efficiency and security. In fact, nearly all repetitive and dangerous work will be done by machines.
- Health & Medicine (1.00)
- Energy > Renewable (1.00)
- Transportation > Ground > Road (0.52)
- Information Technology > Communications > Networks (1.00)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence > Robots > Autonomous Vehicles (0.30)
AI and EI as allies
Both artificial intelligence (AI) and emotional intelligence (EI) have critical roles to play in security. At the same time, Maureen Metcalf of the Forbes Coaches Council published leadership trends for 2021. They involve economic instability, erosion of trust in societal institutions, and decreasing worker privacy as the office moves home. The trick for security professionals is to join the skills and mindsets that constitute the leadership list to the phenomena that make up the security megatrends. The gap between the two -- which threatens to become a chasm during these times of tectonic shifts -- must be bridged for security professionals not to be left behind.
- Information Technology > Security & Privacy (0.40)
- Health & Medicine (0.39)
Artificial intelligence in space
Gal, George Anthony, Santos, Cristiana, Rapp, Lucien, Markovich, Réeka, van der Torre, Leendert
In the next coming years, space activities are expected to undergo a radical transformation with the emergence of new satellite systems or new services which will incorporate the contributions of artificial intelligence and machine learning defined as covering a wide range of innovations from autonomous objects with their own decision-making power to increasingly sophisticated services exploiting very large volumes of information from space. This chapter identifies some of the legal and ethical challenges linked to its use. These legal and ethical challenges call for solutions which the international treaties in force are not sufficient to determine and implement. For this reason, a legal methodology must be developed that makes it possible to link intelligent systems and services to a system of rules applicable thereto. It discusses existing legal AI-based tools amenable for making space law actionable, interoperable and machine readable for future compliance tools.
- Europe > Netherlands > South Holland > Dordrecht (0.04)
- Europe > Kosovo (0.04)
- Europe > Ireland (0.04)
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- Law > Statutes (1.00)
- Law > International Law (1.00)
- Information Technology > Security & Privacy (1.00)
- (4 more...)