soare
I've seen AI try to ESCAPE labs. The apocalypse is already here... and our children will be the first victims
America's richest real estate tycoon disowns son with shockingly icy 12-word statement after'man cave' plans went terribly wrong Horrific stab wounds suffered by grease truck driver, 69, 'stabbed by Mark Sanchez' with NFL star facing up to six years in prison Taylor Swift makes surprise confession on her song'about ex Joe Alwyn' as she insists fans have'always had the wrong idea' about it Sinister notes that are plaguing remote county explodes as fears mount over creepy messages: 'What else could they do?' Key North Atlantic current is on the brink of COLLAPSING - plunging Europe into a'Little Ice Age', scientists warn Visionary billionaire died in a suspicious house fire. Then a mysterious will emerged... CBS staff in panic as anti-woke firebrand Bari Weiss takes control with no-nonsense show on America's most divisive issues Trump's war room plots savage bloodbath as countdown enters final hours: Live updates Trump sends Navy officers wild with powerful message to liberals claiming he's'unwell' We got hopelessly hooked on a trendy'wellness' tonic. We thought it was harmless but our descent into addiction left us depressed, in debt... and in rehab Judge speaks out after her $1.5m mansion'exploded' in suspected arson attack after she defied Trump order Mark Sanchez's alleged victim's family breaks silence as grim photos emerge after violent attack So many women suffer bloated, uncomfortable guts, says DR EMILY LEEMING. Here's the 7 simple cures I give my patients - you won't have read these before My son made a horrifying accusation about me in therapy... it's destroyed our relationship: DEAR JANE Ex-NFL star Mark Sanchez'thought he'd been shot and pounded on window of pub to get help', bartender reveals Nicole Kidman's friends tear into Keith Urban over bombshell split: 'Total 180 on who he is' Real Housewives of Atlanta vet Porsha Williams reveals she is dating a woman... after ex Simon was deported by ICE US billionaire retail estate tycoon is ordered to sell off his'exceptional' £36million London mansion in bitter divorce battle with ex-wife My husband works in Dubai and has cheated on me at least three times so far.
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If Anyone Builds it, Everyone Dies review – how AI could kill us all
W hat if I told you I could stop you worrying about climate change, and all you had to do was read one book? Great, you'd say, until I mentioned that the reason you'd stop worrying was because the book says our species only has a few years before it's wiped out by superintelligent AI anyway. We don't know what form this extinction will take exactly - perhaps an energy-hungry AI will let the millions of fusion power stations it has built run hot, boiling the oceans. Maybe it will want to reconfigure the atoms in our bodies into something more useful. There are many possibilities, almost all of them bad, say Eliezer Yudkowsky and Nate Soares in If Anyone Builds It, Everyone Dies, and who knows which will come true.
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No, AI isn't going to kill us all, despite what this new book says
No, AI isn't going to kill us all, despite what this new book says In the totality of human existence, there are an awful lot of things for us to worry about. Money troubles, climate change and finding love and happiness rank highly on the list for many people, but for a dedicated few, one concern rises above all else: that artificial intelligence will eventually destroy the human race. Eliezer Yudkowsky at the Machine Intelligence Research Institute (MIRI) in California has been proselytising this cause for a quarter of a century, to a small if dedicated following. Then we entered the ChatGPT era, and his ideas on AI safety were thrust into the mainstream, echoed by tech CEOs and politicians alike. Writing with Nate Soares, also at MIRI, is Yudkowsky's attempt to distil his argument into a simple, easily digestible message that will be picked up across society.
Impact of chatbots on mental health is warning over future of AI, expert says
Soares said the case of Adam Raine, a teenager who took his own life, 'illustrates the seed of a problem that would grow catastrophic'. Soares said the case of Adam Raine, a teenager who took his own life, 'illustrates the seed of a problem that would grow catastrophic'. The unforeseen impact of chatbots on mental health should be viewed as a warning over the existential threat posed by super-intelligent artificial intelligence systems, according to a prominent voice in AI safety. Nate Soares, a co-author of a new book on highly advanced AI titled If Anyone Builds It, Everyone Dies, said the example of Adam Raine, a US teenager who killed himself after months of conversations with the ChatGPT chatbot, underlined fundamental problems with controlling the technology. "These AIs, when they're engaging with teenagers in this way that drives them to suicide - that is not a behaviour the creators wanted. That is not a behaviour the creators intended," he said.
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The AI Doomers Are Getting Doomier
Nate Soares doesn't set aside money for his 401(k). "I just don't expect the world to be around," he told me earlier this summer from his office at the Machine Intelligence Research Institute, where he is the president. A few weeks earlier, I'd heard a similar rationale from Dan Hendrycks, the director of the Center for AI Safety. By the time he could tap into any retirement funds, Hendrycks anticipates a world in which "everything is fully automated," he told me. That is, "if we're around."
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Global Big Data Conference
A deepfake video created by Dutch police could help to change the often negative perception of the technology. Deepfakes use generative neural network architectures – such as autoencoders or generative adversarial networks (GANs) – to manipulate or generate visual and audio content. The technology is already being used for malicious purposes including generating sexual content of individuals without their consent, fraud, and the creation of deceptive content aimed at changing views and influencing democratic processes. However, authorities in Rotterdam have proven the technology can be put to use for good. Dutch police have created a deepfake video of 13-year-old Sedar Soares – a young footballer who was shot dead in 2003 while throwing snowballs with his friends in the car park of a Rotterdam metro station – in an appeal for information to finally solve his murder.
Cops Are Now Deepfaking Murder Victims To Catch Their Killers
Detectives are trying something that appears to never have been done before: deepfaking a murder victim in a last-ditch attempt to bring his killer to justice. As Euronews reports, Dutch police are describing their use of "deepfake" technology in the cold case of Sedar Soares' 2003 murder a "world first." The 13-year-old Soares was shot dead in a parking garage in Rotterdam nearly twenty years ago, in what appears to be a classic case of someone being in the wrong place at the wrong time, the report notes. His killers were never caught. Now, Rotterdam police have published a video of the boy walking on a soccer pitch, surrounded by his friends and family and imploring the public to come forward with any information they may have about the unsolved homicide.
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Dutch police create deepfake video of murdered boy, 13, in hope of new leads
Dutch police have received dozens of leads after using deepfake technology to virtually bring to life a teenager almost two decades after his murder. Sedar Soares was shot dead in 2003 while throwing snowballs with friends in the parking lot of a Rotterdam metro station. Now, with the permission of Sedar's family, they have made a video in which the teen asks the public to help solve the cold-case crime. In what Dutch police believe could be a world first, an eerily lifelike image of Sedar appears in the video as he greets the camera and picks up a football. Accompanied by stirring music, he walks through a guard of honour on the field, comprising his relatives, former teachers and friends.
Companies Are Desperate for Machine Learning Engineers
If you have been considering getting into machine learning, now is the time to start. Demand for machine learning engineers (already in short supply) is high and only expected to grow as the complexity of, and access to, machine learning increases. Machine learning has changed rapidly over the past few years. Within the tech world, the bounds of machine learning are constantly being pushed. The complexity of machine learning models and systems engineering has increased as more applications demand real-time or near real-time inferences.
Researchers use AI to simulate soccer with inspiration from world's top players
Artificial Intelligence (AI) is affecting the way we work, learn, shop, and now creating new opportunities for playing and watching our favorite sports. Using AI and machine learning to mimic the behavior of the likes of Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi, a team of researchers from the Institute for Big Data Analytics at Dalhousie were recently named as runners up in 2020's largest international AI soccer simulation competition, RoboCup Japan Open. This is the first time a Canadian team has made the finals for more than 10 years. International robotics competition RoboCup uses soccer simulation to promote robotics and AI research with the research findings used to advance many areas. By 2050, the competition aims to train a team of fully autonomous humanoid robots to win a soccer game against the winner of the most recent World Cup.
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