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Artificial Intelligence
September 20, 2015

UK Prof Calls for Ban on Sexbots

De Montfort University, sex, sexbots

Dr. Kathleen Richardson, a robot ethicist at De Montfort University in Leicester in the UK, has called for a preemptive ban on robots built to have sex with humans.

“Sex robots seem to be a growing focus in the robotics industry and the models that they draw on – how they will look, what roles they would play – are very disturbing indeed. We think that the creation of such robots will contribute to detrimental relationships between men and women, adults and children, men and men and women and women.”

Richardson is making several assumptions, apparently, including about whether smart robots who engage in sexual relationships with humans are reinforcing detrimental stereotypes of women as purely sexual objects. The pushback from some in the industry, including Douglas Hines of True Companion, a company that develops such appliances, is that these robots are “solution for people who are between relationships or someone who has lost a spouse” and that they are not trying to replace a real wife or a girlfriend.

Read more: BBC, IBTimes, ITV

Artificial Intelligence
September 16, 2015
https://intelligent.schwab.com

Charles Schwab Offering AI-Powered Investment Service

Charles Schwab, financial services

Have $5k you want to invest, but not sure where to put it? Charles Schwab has the perfect investment option for the excited-about-self-driving-cars crowd: Intelligent Portfolios.

Pop on over to the site to get started. You’ll answer a short questionnaire, driven by a nicely done interface, answer questions mainly about your risk tolerance, set up your account, and then you’re off and running. Schwab’s investment algorithm will manage your dough for you.

Don’t go thinking this is a novelty, though. The days of your wetware, human-based investment decisioning are coming to an end. Those pesky mammals just can’t make decisions as quickly as an AI.

Artificial Intelligence
September 14, 2015

Google’s Schmidt: Artificial intelligence needs to focus on real-world problems

Agile, Apple, Eric Schmidt, Google, music

Eric Schmidt, CEO of Google, soon to be reorganized as Alphabet, don’t get us started on that, says artificial intelligence needs to focus on real-world problems faced by humans.

“In order for AI to fulfil its long-term potential for society, we need to direct research even more toward real-world messiness: how do you help someone plan a last-minute great vacation when they’ve got limited budget, two picky kids, and only a few days to squeeze it into?”

Writing use cases is indeed the right way to build new products, so we give a thumbs up to this idea.

In addition to being a proponent for Agile methodology, though, Schmidt takes a great glancing swipe at Apple and its new music service, saying Ai could bolster discoverability pair you picky humans with music you’ll like, as opposed to an outdated approach in which you hire elitist experts to pick music for you. Curation, bad. Algorithms, good.

Read the article: BBC.com

More: Re/code

 

Internet of Things
September 8, 2015

Software exec: IoT may create a new generation of hacker hitmen

healthcare, Hitman, security

We’ll probably never get a new Hitman game as good as Blood Money was, and we certainly won’t get a good movie out of that franchise, and now one guy thinks the future version of 47 will be a hacker who knows his or her way around IoT protocols, not piano wire.

Lev Lesokhin, EVP for Strategy at CAST Software, thinks the current lack of focus on stringent security for IoT at every level of development may create freelance “remote hitmen” — as well as drive up enterprise costs to address those security gaps in the long term.

“Its proponents see the Internet of Things as being filled with incredible opportunities; ironically, hackers perceive it to be the same way. Sitting hundreds, or even thousands, of miles away, they could be in position to cause all kinds of damage to individuals, to companies, or more.”

One example Lesokhin provides is the recent FDA safety alert to healthcare companies to stop using a specific networked drug pump, given that a patient’s drug dosage could potentially be altered remotely by someone who knew which IP ports the pump uses. Scary stuff, especially when considered alongside Jeep’s recall to address concerns about insecure braking systems.

Read the article: SC Magazine UK

Nanomaterials
September 3, 2015
http://g-rods.com/

G-Rods: Graphene fishing rods had to happen

fishing, Moby Dick

Small-mouth bass aren’t exactly small, you know. These guys just debuted graphene-based fishing rods. So your dad can’t complain about the monster that got away because the rod broke.

Artificial Intelligence
September 3, 2015

Kakao diversification now includes AI-enabled drones

K Cube Ventures, Kakao, Robopocalypse

K Cube Ventures, in which South Korean tech firm Kakao (formerly Daum Kakao) owns a 10 percent stake, is placing bets on Internet of Things (IoT) and online-to-offline services. One of them is the reason why we use the Robopocalypse tag here: It’s investing 300M won (about US$250k) in UVify, a startup building artificial intelligence-enabled drones.

UVify is staffed by a team of mechanical and aerospace engineers from Seoul National University, according to the company, and its goal is to build drones “that can automatically operate without totally relying on humans,” according to BusinessKorea.

“Uvify has technological competitiveness in both hardware and software as it has been devoted to developing autonomous aircraft and robots in the past years,” — Chung Shina, partner, K Cube Ventures

UVify has also raised another 600M won from Korean state-run investment agencies.

Kakao has built a dominant mobile messaging service in Korea, KakaoTalk, but has struggled to gain any traction for that product outside Asia. The company recently bought Path, a US-based messaging service that has been lauded for a great user interface and approach to messaging, but also failed to make a dent in the North American market as Snapchat, Facebook Messenger, and others have established themselves. It’s not surprising to see diversification on Kakao’s part, and AI plus drones are smart bets. Or will end up enabling our doom. Or both.

More: BusinessKorea, Korea JoongAng Daily, beSuccess

Artificial Intelligence
August 25, 2015

Immortal You: Eter9 aims to create AI version of your personality

Black Mirror, Eter9

You may remember this idea as the basis of Domhnall Gleeson’s excellent 2013 episode of “Black Mirror,” the Channel 4 series. If you haven’t seen the series, now’s the time to do so. Here’s the pertinent trailer:

Spoiler alert. Spoilers start… here!

In the episode, a woman mourning the abrupt death of her husband turns to a company that analyzes his social media posts, all the pics and video and text he posted, to create a virtual version of him. His personality formed the basis of a new AI that, for all intents and purposes, is him.

It’s such a good idea, a new startup, Eter9, aims to bring virtual versions of you to digital life. As in “Black Mirror,” the company will analyze your posts to create your digital replica, which it calls your Counterpart.

“The Counterpart is your Virtual Self that will stay in the system and interact with the world just like you would if you were present.”

As in, even if you, say, perish abruptly in an automobile accident, you’ll still be able to have furious arguments about politics with your distant relatives on Facebook. Which may be a huge positive. If you like the idea of trolling your distant relatives for the rest of digital eternity. Or at least until Eter9’s budget runs out.

More: International Business Times, BBC Newsbeat

Drones
August 25, 2015

Video: Sony’s enterprise drone can go 106MPH, carry 22 lbs

Aerosense, Sony, ZMP

Aerosense, the recently revealed joint venture between Sony and Tokyo-based startup ZMP, is showing off its new product for the enterprise market, and the thing boasts some sturdy numbers. The VTOL (vertical takeoff and landing) drone allegedly can carry up to 22 lbs, which is roughly the weight of a full-grown poodle, and can zip along at speeds up to 106 MPH, which your poodle wouldn’t recommend. Design-wise, it clearly borrows lines from both consumer quad-copters and from military UAV products.

The introduction of drones that are capable of these kinds of speeds will add to the regulatory dialogue, but the appeal to logistics is enormous – more deliveries, more profit.

More: WSJ Japan, UnwireHK, Mashable

Artificial Intelligence
August 20, 2015

Hot AI startup Vicarious adds Samsung to already impressive investor roster

Ashton Kutcher, Jeff Bezos, Jerry Yang, Mark Zuckerberg, Peter Thiel, Samsung, Vinod Khosla

When your early stage startup attracts capital from Jerry Yang, Peter Thiel, Mark Zuckerberg, Jeff Bezos, Ashton Kutcher, or Vinod Khosla, people tend to take notice. If you land all of them, you clearly have at least a great deck. Samsung thinks so, and now it’s joining those celeb investors in taking a piece of Vicarious, which says it is building the “next generation of [artificial intelligence] algorithms.”

Founder Dileep George told the India Times, “AI has many applications. Starting from optical character recognition to scanning receipts from hand-written notes and converting those to digital form and understanding what is written in the notes – that’s one example of an application that can have a big impact.”

More: Vicarious, Stuff.co.nz

 

Artificial Intelligence
August 19, 2015

Report: Artificial intelligence for enterprise may drive financial services, manufacturing

financial services, manufacturing, retail, Tractica

Could an AI be your next hedge fund manager? Market intelligence firm Tractica predicts enterprise artificial intelligence revenue to hit US$11B in 2024, driven by applications for financial services, manufacturing, retail, and oil and gas.

“Tractica forecasts that annual revenue for enterprise applications of AI will increase from $202.5 million worldwide in 2015 to $11.1 billion in 2024, representing a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 56.1%.”

AIE-15-chart

One of the biggest hurdles each industry must jump, Tractica notes, is the collection of clean, valid, accurate data.

“Although some data, such as pictures of cats, are freely abundant on the internet, other data is much rarer, which could prove a barrier to adoption for AI systems that need to make decisions based on reliable data.”

We will also need collectively to deal with the legal, ethical, and political ramifications of enterprise AI. To get back to our original question, could an AI legally manage a hedge fund? What happens when competing companies, with competing profit motives, employ the same, or different, AI entities?

More: Tractica.com

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