Goto

Collaborating Authors

 promise and practice


Artificial Intelligence: The Gap between Promise and Practice The Political Side of Things

#artificialintelligence

Drudge has for years used his site as a web traffic pipeline for Russian propaganda sites, directing his massive audience to nearly 400 stories from RT.com and fellow Russian-government-run English-language news sites SputnikNews.com Those numbers spiked in 2016, when Drudge collectively linked to the three sites 122 times. Drudge's increasing affinity for and proliferation of Russian propaganda comes amid what The New York Times calls "a new information war Russia is waging against the West."


Artificial Intelligence: The Gap Between Promise and Practice

#artificialintelligence

Every day we read of some new area where artificial intelligence has matched or exceeded the proficiency of human experts on some well-defined task. Beyond the well-publicized successes of go- and poker-playing AI agents, machines have shown superiority in complex real-world tasks like interpreting x-ray images and assessing the cancer risk of dermatological lesions. The combination of cheap computing power and memory, connected devices, abundant data and advances in algorithm design create such successes--which then attract further attention and investment, driving further progress. Many speculate that machines will replace humans in many roles and that we will need to reinvent the nature of work itself as a result. Yet a newly published report by MIT Sloan Management Review and The Boston Consulting Group shows there is an enormous gap between these expectations and the current reality for most organizations: Whereas 85 percent of 3,000 executives polled expect AI to result in competitive advantage within five years, only 5 percent engage in substantial AI-centric activities and only 20 percent use any AI all.