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Latest Chapter in 100-year Study Says AI's Promises, Perils are Getting Real


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The AI100 project is designed to track trends in artificial intelligence over the course of a century.

This years update says the effects of artificial intelligence increasingly touch peoples lives.

Credit: AI100/Stanford Institute for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence

A newly published report on the state of artificial intelligence says the field has reached a turning point where attention must be paid to the everyday applications of AI technology — and to the ways in which that technology are being abused.

The report, titled "Gathering Strength, Gathering Storms," was issued today as part of the One Hundred Year Study on Artificial Intelligence, or AI100, which is envisioned as a century-long effort to track progress in AI and guide its future development .

AI100 was initiated by Eric Horvitz, Microsoft's chief scientific officer, and hosted by the Stanford University Institute for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence. The project is funded by a gift from Horvitz, a Stanford alumnus, and his wife, Mary.

The project's first report, published in 2016, downplayed concerns that AI would lead to a Terminator-style rise of the machines and warned that fear and suspicion about AI would impede efforts to ensure the safety and reliability of AI technologies. At the same time, it acknowledged that the effects of AI and automation could lead to social disruption.

This year's update, prepared by a standing committee in collaboration with a panel of 17 researchers and experts, says AI's effects are increasingly touching people's lives in settings that range from movie recommendations and voice assistants to autonomous driving and automated medical diagnoses.

 

From GeekWire


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