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21 votes
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Netflix denies changing posters based on viewers' race
13 votes -
Puppo, the corgi: Cuteness overload with the Unity ML-Agents toolkit
5 votes -
Malak - A short story by Peter Watts
10 votes -
China's Social Credit system: The first modern digital dictatorship
8 votes -
Some thoughts on "Humans"
So I've spent nearly the entire weekend watching Humans and I wanted to share what I think of it and maybe get some discussion going. For those who are not familiar with it, the basic premise is...
So I've spent nearly the entire weekend watching Humans and I wanted to share what I think of it and maybe get some discussion going.
For those who are not familiar with it, the basic premise is an alternate reality present day where "synths" - robots that replaced humans in most menial tasks - are part of everyday life to the point of being a common household item. Within the first episode we learn that there are a handful of synths that are sentient - thinking, feeling individuals. The show explores the implications of that - how previously-servile machines becoming sentient would impact society. There are many parallels to contemporary issues around racism, xenophobia, fear, and I think the show does good job of handling the topic. It is a smart, well-written sci-fi drama.
So, did anyone else here watch it? What do you think of it?
PS: While the post itself doesn't have any spoilers, the comments do.
9 votes -
Canada’s use of artificial intelligence in immigration could lead to break of human rights
4 votes -
Alexa, Siri, Cortana: Our virtual assistants say a lot about sexism
8 votes -
Has anyone been following Mycroft AI (open source digital assistant)?
Video pitch: The world’s first open source AI | Mycroft AI | HT Summit 2017 Fast Company article: Can Mycroft’s Privacy-Centric Voice Assistant Take On Alexa And Google? Kingscrowd review: Top...
Video pitch: The world’s first open source AI | Mycroft AI | HT Summit 2017
Fast Company article: Can Mycroft’s Privacy-Centric Voice Assistant Take On Alexa And Google?
Kingscrowd review: Top Deal: The Secure Open Source Voice Assistant Of The Future
I'm not a techie by any means, but I stumbled across Mycroft AI some time last year, and I'm keeping half an eye on its progress. If ever I get myself a digital assistant, I think it's likely to be Mycroft. (I also love the name!)
I wondered if anyone else had any thoughts about this.
11 votes -
Humble Book Bundle: Game Development
7 votes -
We hold people with power to account. Why not algorithms?
12 votes -
Litigation gone digital: Ottawa experiments with artificial intelligence in tax cases
4 votes -
IBM researchers propose transparency docs for AI services
7 votes -
Noticing sources from Information Theory in Le Guin's "soft" fantasy
Ursula K. Le Guin was my favourite SciFi & Fantasy writer. Her passing earlier in the year was a great loss. I'm reading her scifi-fantasy book Always Coming Home (1985), a compilation of...
Ursula K. Le Guin was my favourite SciFi & Fantasy writer. Her passing earlier in the year was a great loss.
I'm reading her scifi-fantasy book Always Coming Home (1985), a compilation of "in-universe" codices and oral traditions as seen by an anthropologist. Her works were usually put in the "soft scifi" bin, as opposed to the "harder" genre. What caught my attention was a passage from the book, as appeared in an oral narrative (p. 161):
There are records of the red brick people in the Memory of the Exchange, of course, but I don't think many people have ever looked at them. They would be hard to make sense of. The City mind [a vast autonomous network of computers] thinks that sense has been made if a writing is read, if a message is transmitted, but we don't think that way.
Here we're called to notice the information vs. meaning distinction, for which a lot has been said and will be said. It was striking to me how the definition of "sense" according to the "City mind" closely paralleled the concept of information in Claude E. Shannon's seminal paper, A Mathematical Theory of Communication (PDF link). There, "information" simply meant what was transmitted between a sender and a receiver. It gave rise to a consistent definition of the amount of information based on the Shannon entropy.
However, we implicitly feel that this concept of information isn't encompassing enough to include meaning -- a vague term, but one we feel to be important. It seems that meaning enters information only as we (or someone) interpret it. In the words of computer scientist Melanie A. Mitchell, "meaning" seems to have an evolutionary value (Complexity: a Guided Tour, 2009). I feel that we could as well say, meaning may be bonded to the bodily and messy reality where flesh and blood living is at stake.
Returning to the passage in the novel, for me it was read as a rare spark of "hard" science in Le Guin's scifi works. Was it possible that she actually read into the information theory for inspiration? I don't know. But it appears to have captured the tension in the "ever-thorny issue" of meaning vs. information. For the computers, "sense" follows the information-theory concept of information; but for the human people in the story, it "would be hard to make sense of" the information in that way.
Do you have similar "aha" moments, where you find a insightful moment of grasping an important "hard-science" idea while immersed in a "soft" scifi/fantasy work?
Or, we can talk about anything vaguely connected to this post :) Let me know.
10 votes -
How the US is preparing to match Chinese and Russian technology development
6 votes -
The AI of Doom (2016)
5 votes -
The cautious path to strategic advantage: How militaries should plan for AI
12 votes -
New supply chain jobs are emerging as AI takes hold
4 votes -
Learning dexterity
2 votes -
Layoffs at Watson Health reveal IBM’s problem with AI
7 votes -
DeepMind's AI takes an IQ test
5 votes -
Can a computer write a sonnet as well as Shakespeare? The best version of the algorithm fooled people nearly fifty percent of the time
3 votes -
Dota2 - OpenAI Five vs High MMR players
8 votes -
'The discourse is unhinged': how the media gets AI alarmingly wrong
6 votes -
We're underestimating the mind-warping potential of fake video
21 votes -
Google Translate's deep dream: some translation requests yield weird religious prophesies
2 votes -
Ideology, intelligence, and capital with Nick Land
1 vote -
The rise of digital dictatorships - Prof. Yuval Noah Harari
5 votes -
Aliens: Colonial Marines' stupid AI may have been caused by a single typo
12 votes -
"If you are denied an Australian visa, you will be denied by a human officer. They might be assisted by AI, but it's a human that will deny your visa. We call that the 'golden rule'."
3 votes -
Skynet meets The Swarm: How the Berkeley Overmind won the 2010 StarCraft AI competition
3 votes -
DeepMind AI’s new trick is playing ‘Quake III Arena’ like a human
11 votes -
A digital capitalism Karl Marx might enjoy
3 votes -
Budgeting app
I was scrolling through Instagram when I saw an ad for an AI budgeting app called Cleo I was wondering if anyone had experience with this app or has heard anything about it? I do want to start...
I was scrolling through Instagram when I saw an ad for an AI budgeting app called Cleo
I was wondering if anyone had experience with this app or has heard anything about it? I do want to start using budgeting assistants since I'm pretty bad fiscally.
Does anyone use budgeting apps? If so, what would you recommend?
10 votes -
IBM shows off Project Debater, an AI designed to make coherent arguments
5 votes -
AI ethics: How far should companies go to retain employees?
5 votes -
AI at Google: our principles
15 votes -
How a Pioneer of Machine Learning Became One of Its Sharpest Critics
5 votes -
The malicious use of artificial intelligence
5 votes -
Repaint an image in a custom style using a neural network based algorithm
5 votes -
Using artificial intelligence to augment human intelligence
4 votes -
AI Winter Is Well On Its Way
6 votes -
Google plans not to renew its contract for Project Maven, a controversial Pentagon drone AI imaging program
7 votes -
The mind-expanding ideas of Andy Clark
8 votes -
AI researchers boycotting Nature's new Machine Intelligence journal
10 votes -
US military funding effort to catch deepfakes and AI trickery
5 votes -
How the Enlightenment ends: Philosophically, intellectually—in every way—human society is unprepared for the rise of artificial intelligence
11 votes -
New Toronto Declaration calls on algorithms to respect human rights
8 votes -
Google worker rebellion against military project grows
5 votes -
How to turn on Gmail's Smart Compose and let Google AI write your emails
4 votes