We have grown up watching movies that have robots romancing and fighting. Those were science fiction for us at that time, but now its reality. This is where we enter into the amazing and fascinating world of Artificial Intelligence. I think I gave a very magical introduction to AI just like Harry Potter’s movies.
Stop watching the dancing robots 😛 , so that we can see some more interesting facts.
So, Artificial Intelligence is what all the Tech-Giants are after now and there is a pretty good reason for that.Keep reading if AI is something that fascinates you. Even if it doesn’t fascinates you, I suggest you to keep reading and you will be.
Among all the Tech-Giants like Google, Microsoft, Adobe, Facebook, Amazon and many more, who do you think has the best AI tech implemented in their products ?
I presently work at one of above company and my answer is not a biased one 😛
The answer is no one has come up with something exception till now.I hope atleast one of them succeeds in their attempt soon.
The reason is that AI is just a new born baby now and its evolving with every tick and tock of the clock.
Today we are going to see Microsoft’s view on the AI’s future.And, if we are talking about Microsoft then Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella is the one we should listen to.
Let’s start with a quote.I love to read quotes that motivates me to do more everyday.This is one of my favorite from the Microsoft’s CEO.
Experts on employment trends have long raised concerns about how job markets are being disrupted so quickly by artificial intelligence and automation are disrupting the job market, and now it sounds as if Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella shares those concerns.
Nadella lays out the “principles and goals, as an industry and a society, that we should discuss and debate.”
Nadella’s 10 Laws of AI:
- AI must be designed to assist humanity.
- AI must be transparent.
- AI must maximize efficiency without destroying the dignity of people.
- AI must be designed for intelligent privacy.
- AI needs algorithmic accountability so humans can undo unintended harm.
- AI must guard against bias.
- It’s critical for humans to have empathy.
- It’s critical for humans to have education.
- The need for human creativity won’t change.
- A human has to be ultimately accountable for the outcome of a computer-generated diagnosis or decision.
Nadella has made AI one of the pillars of Microsoft’s future growth. But during today’s fireside chat at the DLD tech conference in Munich, he acknowledged that the technology comes with moral imperatives attached. It’s not enough to create AI tools that make more money for Microsoft, he said:
“We need technological breakthroughs that drive growth beyond ‘us’… in the world. … We now have to do our very best work, both as tech industry, the rest of the industry, the public sector, the government, in being able to help our people get skilled for the jobs of the future. That, I think, is the most pressing need. So now we’ve got to say, what are the moral equivalents of that? Not only are we going to upscale everyone for new jobs, [we also have to] talk about the returns on capital vs. labor achieving equilibrium. Those are, I think, the pressing challenges of modern democracies.”
He touched on that theme today as well, saying that “we’re trying to teach machines to learn so that they can do things that humans do, but in turn, help humans. … The next phase to me, really, is how can we democratize this access, versus worshiping the four, five, six companies that have a lot of AI?”
DLD’s video clip of the highlights from Nadella’s chat with Ludwig Siegele, technology editor for The Economist, packs a lot to think about into three minutes. Give it a look, and then judge whether you’re more upbeat or downbeat about the rise of the machines.
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