Archive for the ‘Artificial Intelligence’ Category

How artificial intelligence outsmarted the superbugs – The Guardian

One of the seminal texts for anyone interested in technology and society is Melvin Kranzbergs Six Laws of Technology, the first of which says that technology is neither good nor bad; nor is it neutral. By this, Kranzberg meant that technologys interaction with society is such that technical developments frequently have environmental, social and human consequences that go far beyond the immediate purposes of the technical devices and practices themselves, and the same technology can have quite different results when introduced into different contexts or under different circumstances.

The saloon-bar version of this is that technology is both good and bad; it all depends on how its used a tactic that tech evangelists regularly deploy as a way of stopping the conversation. So a better way of using Kranzbergs law is to ask a simple Latin question: Cui bono? who benefits from any proposed or hyped technology? And, by implication, who loses?

With any general-purpose technology which is what the internet has become the answer is going to be complicated: various groups, societies, sectors, maybe even continents win and lose, so in the end the question comes down to: who benefits most? For the internet as a whole, its too early to say. But when we focus on a particular digital technology, then things become a bit clearer.

A case in point is the technology known as machine learning, a manifestation of artificial intelligence that is the tech obsession de nos jours. Its really a combination of algorithms that are trained on big data, ie huge datasets. In principle, anyone with the computational skills to use freely available software tools such as TensorFlow could do machine learning. But in practice they cant because they dont have access to the massive data needed to train their algorithms.

This means the outfits where most of the leading machine-learning research is being done are a small number of tech giants especially Google, Facebook and Amazon which have accumulated colossal silos of behavioural data over the last two decades. Since they have come to dominate the technology, the Kranzberg question who benefits? is easy to answer: they do. Machine learning now drives everything in those businesses personalisation of services, recommendations, precisely targeted advertising, behavioural prediction For them, AI (by which they mostly mean machine learning) is everywhere. And it is making them the most profitable enterprises in the history of capitalism.

As a consequence, a powerful technology with great potential for good is at the moment deployed mainly for privatised gain. In the process, it has been characterised by unregulated premature deployment, algorithmic bias, reinforcing inequality, undermining democratic processes and boosting covert surveillance to toxic levels. That it doesnt have to be like this was vividly demonstrated last week with a report in the leading biological journal Cell of an extraordinary project, which harnessed machine learning in the public (as compared to the private) interest. The researchers used the technology to tackle the problem of bacterial resistance to conventional antibiotics a problem that is rising dramatically worldwide, with predictions that, without a solution, resistant infections could kill 10 million people a year by 2050.

The team of MIT and Harvard researchers built a neural network (an algorithm inspired by the brains architecture) and trained it to spot molecules that inhibit the growth of the Escherichia coli bacterium using a dataset of 2,335 molecules for which the antibacterial activity was known including a library of 300 existing approved antibiotics and 800 natural products from plant, animal and microbial sources. They then asked the network to predict which would be effective against E coli but looked different from conventional antibiotics. This produced a hundred candidates for physical testing and led to one (which they named halicin after the HAL 9000 computer from 2001: A Space Odyssey) that was active against a wide spectrum of pathogens notably including two that are totally resistant to current antibiotics and are therefore a looming nightmare for hospitals worldwide.

There are a number of other examples of machine learning for public good rather than private gain. One thinks, for example, of the collaboration between Google DeepMind and Moorfields eye hospital. But this new example is the most spectacular to date because it goes beyond augmenting human screening capabilities to aiding the process of discovery. So while the main beneficiaries of machine learning for, say, a toxic technology like facial recognition are mostly authoritarian political regimes and a range of untrustworthy or unsavoury private companies, the beneficiaries of the technology as an aid to scientific discovery could be humanity as a species. The technology, in other words, is both good and bad. Kranzbergs first law rules OK.

Every cloud Zeynep Tufekci has written a perceptive essay for the Atlantic about how the coronavirus revealed authoritarianisms fatal flaw.

EU ideas explained Politico writers Laura Kayali, Melissa Heikkil and Janosch Delcker have delivered a shrewd analysis of the underlying strategy behind recent policy documents from the EU dealing with the digital future.

On the nature of loss Jill Lepore has written a knockout piece for the New Yorker under the heading The lingering of loss, on friendship, grief and remembrance. One of the best things Ive read in years.

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How artificial intelligence outsmarted the superbugs - The Guardian

Orbsat Corp and AI VentureTech to Explore Development of Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Data Applications for Industrial IoT and GPS Market – Yahoo…

AVENTURA, FL / ACCESSWIRE / March 4, 2020 / Orbsat Corp (OSAT) ("Orbsat" or the "Company"), a global provider of communication solutions for connectivity to the world through next-generation satellite technology, announced entering into a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with New York-based, AI VentureTech, Inc. ("AI VentureTech") to explore development of Artificial Intelligence (AI) and data related applications utilizing its satellite-based voice, high-speed data, tracking and Internet of Things (IoT) connectivity services.

Under terms of this 12-month MOU, Orbsat and AI VentureTech will explore the development of AI and Machine Learning (ML) applications for an array of global markets including industrial IoT, fleet management, shipping and logistics, and smart cities. Both companies will explore development of data analytic applications to increase efficiencies and cost savings for shipping and fleet management enterprises by employing advanced satellite technologies.

David Phipps, Chief Executive Officer of Orbsat Corp, said, "Orbsat was founded on the vision of connecting the world using cutting-edge satellite communications technology to deliver voice and high-speed data services. Together with AI VentureTech, we intend to explore how industrial customers can leverage the power of advanced satellite-based data and AI-based analytics to improve the efficiencies of their global operations and ultimately, the value of the services they deliver to their end users."

Thomas Bustamante, the Founder and CEO of AI VentureTech, Inc. commented, "We are very excited to announce our collaboration with Orbsat in developing data-related applications utilizing their suite of satellite-enabled voice, data, tracking and IoT connectivity services. Through the combination of Orbsat's expertise and global reach, we can harness a great source of tracking data on which we can build robust data sets and models for analytic and prediction-based applications for commercial and enterprise clients. We look forward to collaborating with Orbsat and to finding new ways to utilize their products in building-out AI and Cloud-based applications for future customers."

About AI VentureTech

AI VentureTech is an AI research lab and development company that leverages cutting-edge technologies to deliver data-related products and solutions that empower enterprise customers and partners through improving their business eciency, enhancing their value and realizing their digital transformation. Located in New York City, its team of data scientists and engineers can customize AI-powered software and technical solutions for both companies and institutions looking to leverage data and machine learning for greater business value. The Company seeks growth through collaborations in the areas of business analytics, machine learning, natural language processing (NLP), visualization tools, predictive modeling, and cloud advanced analysis.

About Orbsat Corp

Orbsat provides services and solutions to fulfill the rapidly growing global demand for satellite-based voice, high-speed data, tracking and IoT connectivity services. Building upon its long-term experience providing government, commercial, military and individual consumers with Mobile Satellite Services, Orbsat is positioned to capitalize on the significant opportunities being created by global investments in new and upgraded satellite networks. Orbsat's U.S. and European based subsidiaries, Orbital Satcom and Global Telesat Communications, have provided global satellite connectivity solutions to more than 35,000 customers located in over 160 countries across the world.

Forward-Looking Statements

Certain statements in this release constitute forward-looking statements. These statements include the capabilities and success of the Company's business and any of its products, services or solutions. The words "believe," "forecast," "project," "intend," "expect," "plan," "should," "would," and similar expressions and all statements, which are not historical facts, are intended to identify forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements involve and are subject to known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors, including the Company's ability to successfully explore and commercialize on the results of the MOU and the underlying engagement, the Company's ability to meet its performance (financing, operating and other) objectives, including those expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. More detailed information about the Company and the risk factors that may affect the realization of forward-looking statements is set forth in the Company's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the "SEC"), copies of which may be obtained from the SEC's website at http://www.sec.gov. The Company assumes no, and hereby disclaims any, obligation to update the forward-looking statements contained in this press release.

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Orbsat Corp and AI VentureTech to Explore Development of Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Data Applications for Industrial IoT and GPS Market - Yahoo...

‘There’s No Story That Stays Stable for Too Long.’ How Artists Are Using Artificial Intelligence to Confront Modern Anxieties – TIME

Agnieszka Kurants lower Manhattan studio stands among a scattering of cultural outposts that represent some of the most recent efforts of the avant guard to grapple with our cultural moment. When I visited in late January, a gallery two doors down was hosting a reproductive rights-themed show with works listed for upwards of $30,000. Across the street, four floors of the windowless New Museum were taken over by a retrospective of artist Hans Haacke, which included a demographic survey, a portrait of Ronald Reagan and a grass-covered mound of dirt. The seventh floor was occupied by a mixed reality pop-up, sponsored by Ruinart champagne, in which visitors could wander about in augmented reality glasses. Minders politely asked those without reservations to step away from the experience.

Technology and late capitalism similarly intersect in Kurants work, though perhaps with a greater degree of self-awareness. A conceptual artist, she explores modern questions over data rights, online labor exploitation and the power of big corporations. With growing public awareness of issues like the commodification of big data and the ever-increasing power of artificial intelligence (AI), shes part of a new generation of artists and curators who are trying to represent the nature of these new technologies, and the ways we are being transformed by them.

To talk about any kind of new media or new technology, sometimes its better to use an analogue technology, Kurant says, showing a photograph of a 2017 piece entitled A.A.I. She says the name is based on a phrase coined by Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, artificial artificial intelligence, which describes the process of digitally outsourcing work to human freelancers through distributed labor platforms like Amazon Mechanical Turk. The artwork consists of a series of fluorescent termite mounds created from green, blue, violet, yellow or orange artificial sand. She collaborated with entomologists at the University of Florida to enlist the labor of the termites.

If you give them something else that is not sand they will not notice the difference and they will still keep building, Kurant says. She sees termite societies as a kind of dispersed factory akin to the mechanism by which large tech companies collect massive quantities of information about users in order to power sophisticated advertising algorithms. We are all working on a very long, gigantic conveyor belt providing our data or expressing our emotions so that corporations could capitalize on it, she says.

New digitally-enabled economic systems figure even more directly into some of Kurants other pieces. In her Production Line series, produced between 2016 and 2017, she and co-author John Menick contracted hundreds of Amazon Mechanical Turk workers to each draw a single line which were then algorithmically assembled into cohesive drawings. When a painting is sold, the Turkers are given part of the profits.

Artist Agnieszka Kurant stands in front of "Conversions 2" at the de Young museum

Gary Sexton the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco

Collectivity figures prominently in another of Kurants series, The End of Signature, in which she used computer algorithms to coalesce hundreds of individual signatures into a single illegible line. Another of her series, Conversions (2019), focuses on the ways in which collective social energy, in the form of tweets, posts and online searches, is transformed into revenue streams. Consisting of a copper plate covered with liquid crystal paint and attached to computer-controlled heat pumps, the painting changes composition in response to algorithmic sentiment analysis of tens of thousands of social media feeds tied to protest movements, continuously transforming collective societal disquiet into physical heat energy.

Even the activities of protest movements are somehow taken advantage of by corporations, says Kurant, explaining the context of the piece. There is a price tag on social energies.

Other contemporary artists are also grappling with the intersection of artificial intelligence, data and capitalism. At San Franciscos de Young museum, an exhibition entitled Uncanny Valley: Being Human in the Age of AI (Feb. 22 Oct. 25, 2020) takes its name from a term describing how artificial representations of ourselves can come too close for comfort. According to curator Claudia Schmuckli, the installation makes the case that widespread use of AI has brought about a fundamental change in humans relationship with machines.

The contemporary uncanny valley is no longer occupied by the image of the machine but by the statistical data profiles of humans that are compiled by algorithms, which are designed to mine and analyze behavior and project them into tradable or governable futures, Schmuckli says. She adds that famous pop culture representations of AI, like 2001s HAL and Schwarzeneggers Terminator, have been replaced by something even more unsettling: the reflected data profiles generated from our own lives.

A still of Stephanie Dinkins in "Conversations with Bina48" (2014-present)

Stephanie Dinkins; the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco

Notions of uncanny resemblance figure prominently into another piece at the de Young, Conversations with Bina48, which features artist Stephanie Dinkins speaking with a humanoid social robot built to resemble a black woman.

[I] wanted to see what would happen if I tried to become friends, Dinkins tells TIME. Shes interested in exploring how communities of color fit into the new world being created by companies struggling to become more diverse. There is a small subsection of the population thats creating AI ecosystems that will be contributing to many of our lives, she says. What happens if regular people are not a part of thinking about and calling for transparency?

Installation of Ian Cheng's "BOB (Bag of Beliefs)" (2018-2019) at the de Young museum in San Francisco.

Gary Sextonthe Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco

Other artists are using AI to take decidedly unconventional approaches to the uncertainties of our time. In BOB (Bag of Beliefs) (2018-2019), artist Ian Cheng combines neural networks with a video game engine to create an intelligent simulation named BOB. The digital animal resembles a multi-headed snake. As users interact with it via a smartphone app, BOB develops beliefs about the world it inhabits, and its personality evolves over the course of a simulated lifetime. BOBs body and BOBs personality and BOBs beliefs continue to grow, explains Cheng. BOB is quite particular by the end of any of these given exhibitions.

New technologies get blamed for much of todays collective unease, but for Cheng, that same technology may also provide one of the best ways to come to terms with the times we live in. I want to feel that the thing Im looking at is alive, that it has something that can surprise me, Cheng says of his artificially intelligent artworks. It mirrors a bit the way that life feels right now where everything is constantly changing theres no story that stays stable for too long.

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Write to Alejandro de la Garza at alejandro.delagarza@time.com.

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'There's No Story That Stays Stable for Too Long.' How Artists Are Using Artificial Intelligence to Confront Modern Anxieties - TIME

Minister declares creation of artificial intelligence centres in Poland – The First News

"Poland is a place full of talented IT people," the minister said, going on to state that, as a result, the country has become a centre for outsourcing though "that state of affairs does not satisfy our ambition." Tomasz Gzell/PAP

Development Minister Jadwiga Emilewicz told a ministry debate on Artificial Intelligence (AI) on Tuesday that there are plans to develop AI centres in Poland so as to become creators rather than recipients of innovation.

Emilewicz was quoted in a ministry press release as saying that it is necessary to increase the productivity of the Polish economy with the aid of automatisation and the use of algorithms based on AI and machine learning.

"Poland is a place full of talented IT people," the minister said, going on to state that, as a result, the country has become a centre for outsourcing though "that state of affairs does not satisfy our ambition."

"We want unique intellectual value in the field of AI to be created in Poland," Emilewicz said, during a meeting with David Hanson, CEO of the Hanson Robotics company, which makes a humanoid robot called Sophia. "It is time to become a creator rather than a recipient of innovation. That's why we are striving for competence centres to emerge in Poland and for them to be catalysts of cooperation between business and science."

Hanson was quoted in the release as saying that he was considering working towards creating a hub related to ethical AI in Poland. He said the creative and technological sectors are very well developed in Poland as well as that related to robotics, which has persuaded Hanson Robotics to create an R&D centre in Poland and to conduct research into developing technology to serve people, including humanoid robots that interact with people.

The ministry pointed out that the development of AI hubs in Poland gains importance in light of a European Commission policy, which as part of the digital strategy, plans to earmark significant funds to AI development. "In the case of the 'Horizon Europe' programme, the Commission has proposed investing EUR 15 billion in a 'digital technology, industry and space' cluster in which AI is a key field of activity that will be supported," the release read.

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Minister declares creation of artificial intelligence centres in Poland - The First News

New Research from Farnell Reveals Strong Adoption of Artificial Intelligence within the Internet of Things Ecosystem – IoT Business News

Results from Farnells second IoT Survey also show increasing confidence in companies to lead IoT development.

AIoT is the major emerging trend from the survey, demonstrating the beginning of the process to build a true IoT ecosystem. Research showed that almost half (49%) of respondents already use AI in their IoT applications, with Machine Learning (ML) the most used technology (28%) followed by cloud-based AI (19%).

This adoption of AI within IoT design is coupled with a growing confidence to take the lead on IoT development and an increasing number of respondents seeing themselves as innovators. However, it is still evident that some engineers (51%) are hesitant to adopt AI due to being new to the technology or because they require specialized expertise in how to implement AI in IoT applications.

Other results from Farnells second Global IoT Survey show that security continues to be the biggest concern designers consider in IoT implementation. Although 40% cited security as their biggest concern in 2018 and this has reduced to 35% in 2019, it is still ranked significantly higher than connectivity and interoperability due to the type of data collected from things (machines) and humans, which can be very sensitive and personal. Businesses initiating new IoT projects treat IoT security as a top priority by implementing hardware and software security to protect for any kind of potential threat. Ownership of collected data is another important aspect of security, with 70% of respondents preferring to own the data collected by an edge device as opposed to it being owned by the IoT solution provider.

The survey also shows that although many engineers (46%) still prefer to design a complete edge-to-cloud and security solution themselves, openness to integrate production ready solutions, such as SmartEdge Agile, SmartEdge IIoT Gateway, which offer a complete end-to-end IoT Solution, has increased. 12% more respondents confirmed that they would consider third party devices in 2019 than 2018, particularly if in-house expertise is limited or time to market is critical.

A key trend from last years survey results has continued in 2019 and survey results suggest that the growing range of hardware available to support IoT development continues to present new opportunities. More respondents than ever are seeing innovation coming from start-ups (33%, up from 26%), who benefit from the wide availability of modular solutions and single board computers available on the market. The number of respondents adopting off-the-shelf hardware has also increased to 54% from 50% in 2018.

Cliff Ortmeyer, Global Head of Technical Marketing for Farnell says:

Opportunities within the Internet of Things and AI continue to grow, fueled by access to an increasing number of hardware and software solutions which enable developers to bring products to market more quickly than ever before, and without the need for specialized expertise.

This is opening up IoT to new entrants, and giving more developers the opportunity to innovate to improve lives. Farnell provides access to an extensive range of development tools for IoT and AI which provide off-the-shelf solutions to common challenges.

Despite the swift integration of smart devices such as Amazons Alexa and Google Home into daily life, evidencing a widespread adoption of IoT in the consumer space, in 2019 we saw a slight shift in focus away from home automation with the number of respondents who considered it to be the most impactful application in IoT in the next 5 years reducing from 27% to 22%. Industrial automation and smart cities both gained, at 22% and 16% respectively, underpinned by a growing understanding of the value that IoT data can bring to operations (rising from 44% in 2018 to 50% in 2019). This trend is witnessed in industry where more manufacturing facilities are converting to full or semi-automation in robotic manufacturing and increasing investment in predictive maintenance to reduce production down times.

The survey was conducted between September and December 2019 with 2,015 respondents participating from 67 countries in Europe, North America and APAC. Responses were predominantly from engineers working on IoT solutions (59%), as well as buyers of components related to IoT solutions, Hobbyists and Makers.

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New Research from Farnell Reveals Strong Adoption of Artificial Intelligence within the Internet of Things Ecosystem - IoT Business News