Artificial intelligence
Artificial intelligence (technology, computer science) | |
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Abbreviation | AI |
Interest of | • Ajay Agrawal • Sam Altman • Yoshua Bengio • Hans-Christian Boos • Nick Bostrom • Matthew Daniels • Marvin Minsky • Elon Musk • National Security Commission on Artificial Intelligence • Andrew Ng • Peter Norvig • Omar Al Olama • Benjamin Pring • Stuart J. Russell • Lila Tretikov |
Articial Intelligence is a branch of computer science intended to enable computers to carry out 'intelligent' tasks previously made by human beings. |
Artificial intelligence (AI) is the branch of computer science which seeks to re-create the "intelligence" of human beings in software.
Contents
Natural language parsing
- Full article: Natural language parsing
- Full article: Natural language parsing
Natural language parsing, i.e. understanding ordinary human language, has long been the holy grail of artificial intelligence, as it offers the chance to communicate with computers as easily as with other people. However, its feasibility (or even possibility) — together with what actually constitutes "intelligence" - remains an open question. There are reports, however, that by 2017, conversations on major social media platforms are to some extent handled by script/AI activity.[1]
Semantic web
- Full article: Semantic web
- Full article: Semantic web
After creating the World Wide Web, Tim Berners Lee announced that he was interested in a semantic web, that is, a global web of documents that are not human readable, but machine-readable. To this end, the W3C developed the Resource Description Framework (RDF), a data format intended to express meaning, which could in theory be auto-translated into human languages by software. This is used by this website though the Semantic Mediawiki software which is used on this website. Each page on this site has a small blue RDF icon in the top right hand corner, which presents the page in RDF.
Global control grid
- Full article: Global control grid
- Full article: Global control grid
The idea of a global control grid has long been a fantasy of megalomaniacs. As the 21st century progresses, more and more tasks formerly done by human beings are being turned over to software.
An example
Page name | Description |
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Algorithm manipulation | Where algorithms on Social media are used in order to promote the Official narrative. |
Related Quotations
Page | Quote | Author | Date |
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Sam Altman | “Both publicly and internally, leaders at Microsoft are cheering OpenAI's apparent return to normalcy following days of chaos.
The ChatGPT creator, in which Microsoft has reportedly invested some $13 billion, has been on a roller-coaster ride that began Friday when its board abruptly fired Sam Altman as CEO and ended with his return and the appointment of a new board early Wednesday. Following Altman's ouster, Microsoft swooped in to hire him along with OpenAI co-founder and president Greg Brockman — who quit OpenAI in protest over Altman's termination — to lead a new advanced AI research team at Microsoft, and also offered to hire any other OpenAI employees who wanted to leave. Sam Altman is returning to OpenAI as CEO after his ousting last week, and three board members that participated in his termination have been removed. At that point, Microsoft, already majority owner in OpenAI, was positioned to essentially "acquire" OpenAI by absorbing its talent, after nearly all the startup's 770 or so workers signed a letter saying they would take Microsoft up on the offer unless Altman was reinstated. However, a deal was ultimately reached for Altman to return to OpenAI rather than allowing the $90 billion company to collapse, in what Fortune tech reporter David Meyer wrote is an outcome that "is pretty ideal for Microsoft."” | Fox News Sam Altman Breck Dumas | 2023 |
Greg Coppola | “I’ve just been coding since I was ten, I have a Ph.D., I have five years of experience at Google, and I just know how algorithms are. They don’t write themselves. We write them to make them do what we want them to do.” | Greg Coppola | July 2019 |
Microsoft | “Following Altman's ouster, Microsoft swooped in to hire him along with OpenAI co-founder and president Greg Brockman — who quit OpenAI in protest over Altman's termination — to lead a new advanced AI research team at Microsoft, and also offered to hire any other OpenAI employees who wanted to leave.
Sam Altman is returning to OpenAI as CEO after his ousting last week, and three board members that participated in his termination have been removed. At that point, Microsoft, already majority owner in OpenAI, was positioned to essentially "acquire" OpenAI by absorbing its talent, after nearly all the startup's 770 or so workers signed a letter saying they would take Microsoft up on the offer unless Altman was reinstated. However, a deal was ultimately reached for Altman to return to OpenAI rather than allowing the $90 billion company to collapse, in what Fortune tech reporter David Meyer wrote is an outcome that "is pretty ideal for Microsoft."” | Breck Dumas | 2023 |
Related Document
Title | Type | Publication date | Author(s) | Description |
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Document:Off the Leash: How the UK is developing the technology to build armed autonomous drones | Article | 10 November 2018 | Peter Burt | The United Kingdom should make an unequivocal statement that it is unacceptable for machines to control, determine, or decide upon the application of force in armed conflict and give a binding political commitment that the UK would never use fully autonomous weapon systems |