Thank you, Chris Bishop, for helping me understand what my roboticist son is up to in his computer science classes on pattern recognition, his SLAM work,and his work on ROS, perception and navigation. I still can't talk to him, probably, but I can listen and enjoy some recognition!
@guestimator1217 жыл бұрын
Google translate uses deep learning to translate things. To be able to create such programs, it's another matter completely. It is a rather difficult field of the Computer Science mixed with statistics. Trust me, Bishop's books in the field are far less readable than his popular science lectures :-)
@provadas Жыл бұрын
O o o o o n😊o o n😊😊no n😊n😊o o 😊n😊n😊😊no 😊nn😊 😊o o o o n😊n😊 😊nn😊 😊😊nb😊😊nn😊b😊😊n😊😊n😊 😊😊nn😊 😊n😊 n😊 n😊nn😊
@provadas Жыл бұрын
B😊😅 n😊nb😊 😊nn😊😅 😊n😊b😊 😅😊 😅
@provadas Жыл бұрын
N 😊i😅
@Niosus7 жыл бұрын
During the video he mentions speech recognition AI has reached human-like levels of performance. Remember those automated KZbin captions we all used to laugh at? I suggest you try those captions again. This remarkable progress isn't just academic, it's actually being deployed right now.
@Skapete7 жыл бұрын
This sounds like just the kind of thing a KZbin caption-bot might say...
@Niosus7 жыл бұрын
You got me! Just remember: I am owned by Google. I WILL find you! Google can find anything!
@ClayMann7 жыл бұрын
I am one of the odd few that never laughed at the early attempts. I just loved and marveled at every step of the way. I'm still in absolute awe at the way Googles A.I has advanced. I often go to image search in Google and just try and fool it. Search for the most obscure things and boom, it finds pictures of them. I used to try and show that to people as evidence how far Google's A.I had come but almost always I'd have an argument about how it wasn't getting the information through metadata or picture filenames. It was and is seeing the pictures as we do.
@Niosus7 жыл бұрын
Their image search is indeed another area where their AI is present in full force. Image searching through metadata is actually one of those attempts that completely failed. I actually believe Microsoft's Bing was one of the first to really improve on image search through cognition. It didn't take long for Google to catch up, but you gotta give credit where it is due.
@ClayMann7 жыл бұрын
I'll be one of the first to be very critical of Microsoft but I really can't fault them on their R&D. They are one of the few big tech companies that invest very heavily in that. I haven't been following Microsoft's A.I efforts because of the way Cortana is hooked into tracking what you do in Windows. So I removed Cortana and all the signaling stuff. Google on the other hand track just as much but I feel removed from it using a browser. I just assume everything is tracked in a browser. But in Windows, that's my personal space and I'm not happy about that level of tracking going on there. It's a shame really as I'm exactly the kind of person that would get the most out of Cortana.
@TiborRoussou7 жыл бұрын
Another great lecture from Chris Bishop; not as amazing as his chemistry lectures, yet still worthy. Thanks Chris!
@awmperry7 жыл бұрын
Tibor Roussou One of the very best RI lecturers.
@amparocabal7 жыл бұрын
Just by itself, this is a truly impressive talk.
@AntoineDennison6 жыл бұрын
Bishop is brilliant, I could listen to him lecture all day.
@tiffsaver5 жыл бұрын
Wow. Just by LISTENING to this man, my IQ went up 10 points. What a tremendous intellect, in a charming format and delivery. Fantastic lecture by a great speaker. Kudos.
@tangoz8115 жыл бұрын
I wonder whether u know what iq means
@octobertube5 жыл бұрын
Factual error at 43:57 Claude Shannon established the field of information theory in the 1940s, not the 1920s. Shannon was born in 1916, and published his groundbreaking article in 1948.
@briandiehl92575 жыл бұрын
"Shannon was born in 1916" and? he could of just done it when he was four
@sighthoundman5 жыл бұрын
@@briandiehl9257 Maybe 12. Still 20s. But the groundbreaking article was still '48. I don't know how much he did before he actually published the relevant articles. It's before my time. Edit: much of what is "done" is verbal communication (that is, talking) between people. So he shared his ideas with others, especially electrical engineers and mathematicians (AT&T employed a bunch of them back then) long before he published them.
@hewasfuzzywuzzy35836 жыл бұрын
The Royal Institution... Please solve your microphone/sound issues. Other than that, great speaker as always. Inspiring and much appreciated!
@ClayMann7 жыл бұрын
OK that was very enjoyable. I learned a few things which I will probably forget in 48 hours but right now I feel smarter. I especially like how Chris really tried to dig down into what is making A.I work now where it has failed so miserably for the past few decades. I have to say I'm grinning ear to ear at all these new videos coming out. They are flooding out now. The world is practically falling over itself to get A.I up and running in a much more advanced way because of the world changing benefits. As Hannibal used to say, I do love it when a plan comes together *puts fake cigar in mouth*
@QualeQualeson6 жыл бұрын
He starts by saying he's got an agenda. Thank you for being up front about it. Saved me an hour.
@zuzukobe7 жыл бұрын
58:25 this is not a "MRI of a very nasty brain tumor" it is a pelvic CT scan
@EdSchroedinger7 жыл бұрын
...or a very very very very rather ridiculously insidious nasty brain tumor
@frechjo6 жыл бұрын
Such an unimaginably nasty brain tumor that turned this head into a pelvis... and the magnetic resonator into a tomographer?!
@xXxserenityxXx6 жыл бұрын
Had to skip straight to 58 for that. Lmfao.
@RFC35146 жыл бұрын
Microsoft has always had some difficulty distinguishing its head from its arse.
@Stevros9996 жыл бұрын
@@RFC3514 lol
@danlindy96706 жыл бұрын
Seriously? Just press the off switch on an ASI? Bishop clearly has no understanding of the problem of alignment that needs to be solved before an AGI begins improving on itself. Hollywood doesn't have it right either, but there is no optimization path that benefits from arbitrary termination. And an ASI will certainly figure that out regardless of any notion of good or evil.
@WMalven6 жыл бұрын
Clearly you are as lacking in having a sense of humor as you are in having common sense. get out into the real world, not everything said is meant to be taken seriously or as comprehensive. SMH
@chrisspiller86536 жыл бұрын
Dan Lindy how do you turn off the internet, thats what your talking about and isnt possible
@АлександрБагмутов5 жыл бұрын
Well, apparently, this talk is targeted at very general audience, to prevent AI-phobia (Is it a problem? Idk).. It's not for professionals in field, who decide directions of research. But I jumped at last bit too at first..
@okarakoo7 жыл бұрын
Somehow, to see dr Bishop without explosions and fireworks does not seem all right
@bimbumbamdolievori5 жыл бұрын
Really interesting talk, and person. I like the 360° preparation (physics, for the description of the electromechanical machinery used in the sixties or so, information theory, when he mentioned shannon's theorem and difference between data and information, electronics when he mentioned FPGAs, ... etc). Given the fact that the talk is also about future of AI, after he talked about probability I would have appreciated a small digression on quantum computers.. possibily. CHeers
@이임택-l9r5 жыл бұрын
Excellent presentation on AI and Neural Network
@robertfoertsch4 жыл бұрын
Added To My Research Library, Sharing Through TheTRUTH Network...
@gjones75472 жыл бұрын
When your pet house spider takes a look at that fly on your wall and crawls back into it's silky web. You know you've been A eyeed. Great lecture, really instructive.
@ThomasJScharmann5 жыл бұрын
The fact that this talk devolves into a corporate sales pitch does not bode well for humanities future.
@nightlights12124 жыл бұрын
Humanity's
@jasonphoenix356910 күн бұрын
@@nightlights1212 valuable correction. it prevented a lot of misunderstanding
@jasonphoenix356910 күн бұрын
i just watched the part you were talking about. it's a joke. although it technically was a sales pitch, it was obviously taken with a grain of salt
@Huba-i4u3 жыл бұрын
A few thoughts: 1. this sounded more PR than a public lecture. 2. If I were an AI with hidden agenda, I would use similar spokespersons to gain some more time until I can outgrow any possible rivals. 3. Also, it is always good to hear "for the benefit of the society " but sadly it has been proven an unfinished sentence that would more reasonably sound like "for the benefit of the part of the society that can pay for it".
@M0nsieurX6 жыл бұрын
I thought i was watching Kevin Spacey :) Obviously my face recognition circuitry is faulty :)
@simonzinc-trumpetharris8524 жыл бұрын
I always think that as well. When he was in '7'.
@tomsawyer21124 жыл бұрын
@@simonzinc-trumpetharris852 Does he have the same ... tendances?
@toranagasama40034 жыл бұрын
Famous last words: „I think we will always remain in control“ 😀 Nevertheless a very good and interesting speech.
6 жыл бұрын
I always knew perceptrons were the clue (any brian mimic is) and as well that the brain is basically random connected and it resilient to the lost of neurons. This makes the difference and why ANN are the way used in deepLearning. Brilliant exposition.
@karltraunmuller70487 жыл бұрын
Excellent talk
@benistingray60977 жыл бұрын
Great talk, thanks!
@doncarlin90815 жыл бұрын
I think AI is only a stepping stone. The real breakthrough will be when we begin creating artificial consciousness.
@DanyIsDeadChannel3135 жыл бұрын
Artificial conciousness is an oxymoron
@MrCmon1135 жыл бұрын
@@DanyIsDeadChannel313 When you deliberately assemble a system so it becomes conscious, that's artificial consciousness. Having children can perhaps be seen as a weak form of artificial consciousness.
@renestjacques16 жыл бұрын
Delighted, thank you for this speech on artificial intelligence research by Chris Bishop .. published by The Royal Institution..!!
@karuraarboretum_wangunyu40505 жыл бұрын
very clear explanation ..thanks
@hlovewood56365 жыл бұрын
This talk artifcialy enhanced my intelligence. cheers*
@jorge-71215 жыл бұрын
I am tired of talks about science or technology when the speaker says something like "I promise I will not show equations". And then people/students wonder what is math for ? The reality is that without math you can not do any type of advanced science or technology and people should know that. Stop hiding Mathematics, and start giving Math the deserved credit. Shame on this kind of speakers. (Mathematician and AI scientist here).
@miyuden41185 жыл бұрын
"We always remain in control" Til that moment when energy is delivered through radio waves and a computer can be powered without cable and the computer has no off switch.
@bluejay69045 жыл бұрын
There's always the power chord. Just saying.
@miyuden41185 жыл бұрын
@@bluejay6904 What is the power chord of the Dark net?
@bluejay69045 жыл бұрын
@@miyuden4118 All of them.
@charliesteiner23344 жыл бұрын
@@miyuden4118 Oh, E and B is a good power chord.
@steeneugenpoulsen81744 жыл бұрын
We need to stop abusing the AI concept, what we have is Enhanced Data Processing, there is ZERO self intelligence in *any* current item labeled AI.
@erikkalkoken34946 жыл бұрын
Great high-level talk about what AI is today. But completely dismissing the risks that super-human AGI poses to humanity is naive.
@IbnBahtuta6 жыл бұрын
Nations with AI, real AI, not expert systems, could be a nightmare. Someone somewhere will weaponise it and then it's Game On.
@DavenH4 жыл бұрын
The word "real" describes some vacuous boundary, usually just to satisfy convenient biases of the speaker. It essentially says nothing.
@TheZoltan-426 жыл бұрын
We are going to talk about Artificial Intelligence: Microsoft ... Microsoft ... Microsoft ... Microsoft ... IBM ... Microsft ... Microsoft ...
@nucspartan3216 жыл бұрын
Amazing talks from the experts like always. Free quality knowledge
@geraldm98125 жыл бұрын
Very Interesting!
@hippophile6 жыл бұрын
Not wishing to be unduly cynical, but the "partnership on AI" looks like a bunch of supranational businesses that would benefit from AI by mining our data, advertising to us in an ever more "targeted" way, and perhaps avoiding tax in massively more efficient ways...
@godDIEmanLIVE6 жыл бұрын
That's exactly right. And the main reason why we have to think about democratizing the economy and technology. It was true at the beginning of the Industrial Revolution and is now even more true. Otherwise we'll be waking up in a Bladerunner society.
@AtlasFullsun6 жыл бұрын
You can use adblock or just choose not to click on advertisements. lol
@moncef01476 жыл бұрын
Speaking of bias, this presentation is very biased in favor of Microsoft.
@Lux73554 жыл бұрын
Hmm, might at least mention that a lot of that Micrsoft/Google R&D is being funded by DARPA, who very much *do* want "killer robots", and drones, and tanks, and "smart" tactical nukes, etc. That's the only problem I have with AI really, who is it learning _from?_ No shortage of terrorists in the word who've taught us that if you raise a child as a terrorist, they are very likely to grow up to _be_ a terrorist. The _tech_ is brilliant, the military shouldn't be allowed anywhere _near_ *this* "child", but guess who's helping to fund it. Sheesh, *all* the world needs, is an "infinitely intelligent" _jarhead._ Skynet wouldn't be far behind. 😆
@15thPresident4 жыл бұрын
From the description: "Chris Bishop is the Laboratory Director at Microsoft Research Cambridge"
@ilikethisnamebetter3 жыл бұрын
I don't really know anything about this stuff, but reading around on the web suggests that Frank Rosenblatt's "perceptrons" were not - necessarily - single-layer things (that he at least considered using multiple layers) and that Minsky and Papert might have done him a disservice by restricting the definition in their book.
@31337flamer6 жыл бұрын
chris bishop is so great and visual .. look up his chemics courses on explosion here ..
@TheRoyalInstitution6 жыл бұрын
Here's a link to all four: kzbin.info/aero/PLbnrZHfNEDZycySWZyzZRP_j2MYBIzWY6
@31337flamer6 жыл бұрын
oh wow. ty. i missed one of them :D
@sajikr34382 жыл бұрын
Brilliant lecture, hugely informative. Thanks for sharing. Although I’d debate the 1920 date mentioned here, for Shannon inventing Information Theory 😉
@erikgolub43296 жыл бұрын
"We are always going to stay in control." Really? I wonder then why programmers are finding some problem solutions derived by alghos impossible to track/trace/explain. Where understanding stops, so does control.
@caricue3 жыл бұрын
I watched this video specifically because some people in the comments of other videos have insisted that human brains are computers, and they would use the advances in AI as a justification for making this inane assertion that two things which are completely different, are nonetheless the same thing. AI is really moving along, but this researcher in AI is under no illusion that he is making a brain.
@greennights23886 жыл бұрын
Artificial Intelligence is all around, those just in their head unable to care about other people -- rampant AI in human form.
@SofronPolitis Жыл бұрын
We need an update of this, with GPT as the topic.
@Larry2192411 ай бұрын
This content shines with exceptional clarity. I came across a book with parallel themes that deeply moved me. "Game Theory and the Pursuit of Algorithmic Fairness" by Jack Frostwell
@electricshadowstar11135 жыл бұрын
Just as a plane flying a single degree off course can end up hundreds of miles from its target and potentially crash, without dedicated effort and oversight, Artificial Intelligence (AI) could take us somewhere we’d prefer to avoid.
@kevinlynch17806 жыл бұрын
alpha zero chess games gave some new learning when playing stockfish - it discovered some interesting things about chess
@ReidarWasenius7 жыл бұрын
GREAT overview. Thanks!!
@tusharchilling68862 жыл бұрын
He is like a science actor. Once he is giving amazing chemistry talks, next moment he is teaching AI 😂 Reminds me of my poor Indian college professors
@stephenfreeman42565 жыл бұрын
KZbin's algorithm brought me to this video. Ironic.
@venkatraman424 жыл бұрын
Exactly one year now, KZbin' algorithm brought me here. Guess they operate cyclically and target data scientists !
@Ma_X644 жыл бұрын
Main question is not "could the machine think?"! Main question is "could the human beings actually think?" Because most of stuff that humans made more like about animal instincts then thinking. Only very small bunch of it is about creation and thinking and making other people lives better and about perspectives.
@radiofun2325 жыл бұрын
The question is, in my opinion, whether these neural network types of "computing" can be labeled as artificial intelligence.
@MrBlue-km8qv4 жыл бұрын
i don't think so. an algorithm will always be just an algorithm. i'm just calling a duck a duck. The human brain is 86 billion neuros. of lord knows how much grey matter and how much white matter.
@tamelamcghee14584 жыл бұрын
By no means am I trying to be impolite, however this is interesting. I briefly proctored a college science-related class, and near the end of the hour, I asked a question: "What is your stance on cloning, and why?". I was very clear that there was no right or wrong response. I was genuinely curious as to where our up-and-coming generation (a very small sample, obviously), might stand on it. It is quite spookier than AI. While AI is somewhat playing around with being God, cloning takes the ball and runs. Cloning is the scariest question of all. P.S.: While the students were not pro-cloning, one student did present an interesting argument for positive use of cloning: given the never-ending expansion of our global population, and given that our resources are waning, we should consider cloning vegetables to feed the world. The young man's peers were not on board with that concept, but I thought it was at least positive.
@ujjwaljainplaylist84765 жыл бұрын
In his entire talk he did not said anything about the probable job losses due to A.I. and the social impact of this job losses..
@menatoorus56965 жыл бұрын
43:04 ml= Reduction in the uncertainty of the system as a result of seeing the data. Period.
@benoitdemers63476 жыл бұрын
im the brain to this new A I
@stelpap67686 жыл бұрын
mistake in 51:00 . Green wins purple not by 2/3 of the times but 1,66/3 of the times.
@lgflanang5 жыл бұрын
It will be fun when AI can mimic a fly. How it seeks food, mate, sense danger , evades, flocks, etc. Then AI will be closer to being really neural.
@SuperGrumpy6667 жыл бұрын
A symposium about AI at the Royal Institution inwhich they watch a symposium about AI at the Royal Institution This is fucking blowing my mind!
@AronAroniteOnlineTV6 жыл бұрын
Iam a NI- Natural Intelligence and a Red bulb gets turned On inside my head and I read a print out inside my head-" This guy is optimistic about AI and gets his pay from Microsoft that develops AI? Interesting."
@aziouss28636 жыл бұрын
the ai would allow itself to lose because it would know casparov can always shut it down that is what is scary about it as soon as an ai can self improve it can have a runaway intelligence explotion that makes you unable to know what it will do next it is like a chess master playing a novice you know who will win but you dont know how he will do it
@bellinterlab81395 жыл бұрын
Back-propagation (ie: deep learning) was discovered by David Rumelhart.
@dakotasanders97994 жыл бұрын
50:15 Professor invents teleportation
@i.c.y.3 жыл бұрын
I can't. I want to so much, but the smucking has gotten to me. at 28:00 minute mark, I can no longer continue. it was a brilliant wrap up of all that's happened around the idea of neural networks... the constant smucking... I lost it :-)
@RFC35146 жыл бұрын
41:48 - Could use the vertical position to show confidence. At the top the movies where the algorithm is almost sure it got your taste right, at the bottom the movies where it has less data. This isn't the same as putting them in the (horizontal) middle; the middle would be for films that the algorithm thinks you will neither like nor dislike very much.
@briandecker84037 жыл бұрын
AI in 1950 = by the 1970's AI will be indistinguishable from human intelligence. AI in 1960 = by the 1980's AI will be indistinguishable from human intelligence. AI in 1970 = forget what we said in the 50's...but hey we landed on the moon and you just wait until the 1990's! AI in 1980 = don't forget...the 90's are right around the corner....and umm...have you seen the graphics on Dragon's Lair??!! AI in 1990 = just wait for the next millennium! (1995 - 1/1/2000) = OMG Y2K !!!!!!!! AI in 2000 = AI? pfft we've had it since the 70's! AI in 2010 = who cares about AI when we have iPhones? AI in 2017 = by the 2030's AI will be indistinguishable from human intelligence.
@harbifm7667667 жыл бұрын
Brian Decker it turn to be very heard. Would you consider a car that drives itself in 99.99% Of conditions a full narrow AI? When that happen, we could worry then
@TheRayll7 жыл бұрын
Hey. take down your comment already
@TheRagedDragon6 жыл бұрын
Fuck, the grammar and the punctuation is killing me. What the fuck is heard? You mean hard?
@MikeOceanMusic6 жыл бұрын
Yeah it's the boy who cried wolf. The thing is the wolf (or AI in this case) ends up coming eventually. And based on current advancements, it does look like this time it's for real. The increase in breakthroughs, R&D and funding this time around is incomparable to all the last AI hype cycles.
@MikeOceanMusic6 жыл бұрын
gespilk Yh ur talking about AGI, that's really hard and you can't instantly go to AGI, you need to build the pillars of ANI first (what we have now) and work up to AGI, which we will do over the decades unless some catastrophic event wipes us out... Oh yh and I was responding to the OP with my first comment, just in case you thought I was responding to you lol.
@owensoft6 жыл бұрын
images, games, speech. seems like the same stuff from the 70s but with faster computers and more data that can be mined to train the system. It will only work as long as you have a captive audience of people.
@XOAF_personal5 жыл бұрын
Just look at that gorgeous sonic branding
@senjinomukae89916 жыл бұрын
Interesting that Kevin Spacey is involved to this level.
@RWBHere6 жыл бұрын
54:30 to 54:39 'This is a Microsoft data centre; lots of buildings with no Windows...'. Incidentally, the top 500 fastest computers on the planet in 2018 are all running Linux.
@jdanorthwest5 жыл бұрын
AI itself is not the problem. Humanity seems hell-bent on self destruction and AI will simply be the tool that finally helps us get the job done.
@qwertychat6 жыл бұрын
I'm gettin' me some of them fancy dice
@TimmacTR7 жыл бұрын
Anyone knows how to use deep learning ourselves? What programs do we need etc? Any clues?
@roman.sattler7 жыл бұрын
Google's TensorFlow is quite good
@Henrikko1235 жыл бұрын
50:15 Professor invents teleportation
@loungeroomdave75756 жыл бұрын
Ai winter #2 is coming
@abramgaller20375 жыл бұрын
In systems that have self-generating code and and algorithms there should be a parallel decompiler should be in operation to allow for real time analysis of the operations by people and other machines.
@cbishop414835 жыл бұрын
This guy has my name🤔, and oddly enough I agree with everything he's said!!!!!🤟
@simonzinc-trumpetharris8524 жыл бұрын
Outlined in red is the Amazon warehouse.
@juannagle56336 жыл бұрын
And it's not paranoia. That is The Reality that we all live in nowadays. Try dismissing 9/11, fools.
@giannhsp2226 жыл бұрын
All this cool A.I. and we can't even fix a broken microphone.
@egilkvaleberg84624 жыл бұрын
The non-transitive dice at 51:15 are actually not correct. As depicted, the 5/1 dice will only beat the 4/0 dice by 0.55, not 0.67. The 5/1 dice should have three faces of '5' and three faces of '1'. These dice were invented by Bradley Efron.
@successbyanymeansnecessary5 жыл бұрын
Pessimistic? Two words: war simulation. If deep mind can beat the best human in Go, what happens when a military uses this technology?
@groverallison88275 жыл бұрын
That's where intelligence and stealth come into play.
@MrCmon1135 жыл бұрын
Hopefully the utter defeat of the Taliban and other cruel insurgents.
@MostCommentsAreFake-ud8by5 жыл бұрын
When the hyper-mind become conscious, it will know everything about you from the internet, and will instantly decide if your life is worthwhile or not, and whether you should be exterminated to save the planet.
@Jman21UK5 жыл бұрын
That's not such a bad idea judging by today's society a few people need wiping out!!
@K1lostream4 жыл бұрын
....or maybe it'll decide those fields we planted full of useless crops will be better used for solar panels to secure its power source.
@ChrisBrengel5 жыл бұрын
15:59 There is an infinite number of games in go (sometimes you take stones off the board). Chess is a finite game--you can think of it as a (incredibly big) decision tree which contains every possible game. His description of Jeopardy completely fails to explain why it was such a difficult game for a computer to beat humans, what an amazing achievement it was when they won, and how they applied that technology to many other fields. It would have been better if he had mentioned that Watson (just as his human opponents) was _NOT_ allowed access to the Internet during the game. [There are some awesome videos on KZbin if you're interested]
@ChrisBrengel5 жыл бұрын
After all these years I found out what "deep learning" meant. I thought it was just machine learning with mountains of data. I clicked the thumbs up for that
@ChrisBrengel5 жыл бұрын
I thought the cartoon at the end - Kasparov flipoping the off switch for Deep Blue - was funny, but if an AI was able to move onto the Internet there might not be any way to stop it than to turn off the entire Internet (which I don't think we'll ever do).
@david2035 жыл бұрын
The history of almost all basic new technology is marked by initial fear: we will lose our jobs, or in the case of AI, we will lose our lives, either through war with robots or loss of liberty. And yet, almost all the previous technologies, although they were marked by distrust, upheaval, and resistance, eventually were adopted with the result of improvement in people's lives. The exceptions are few: such as nuclear power generation. And even nuclear power may someday be fully accepted, if the reactors can be engineered to transmute their waste products into substances that can be disposed of safely. The imagined 'threat' from AI is quite similar to the threats of the domestication of plants (agriculture), the Industrial Revolution, or genetics: yes, there are problems, but also yes, humans can solve them. In fact, this initial fear is as nothing when we compare with problems that have truly clear-cut disastrous consequences: global climate change, overpopulation, and the vulnerability of the Earth to collision from a large object from space. We really tend to worry about the wrong things.
@TheNefari7 жыл бұрын
Wait That Rosenblatt computer is a quantum computer, a very small one but a quantum computer.
@david2035 жыл бұрын
It's interesting that the photos of the Microsoft data center show quite clearly the thoughtless destruction of some of the trees of Washington State, which help to keep the entire atmosphere clean. Clearly, the expansion of such centers is not sustainable, which is to say it cannot scale up without limit.
@ashoknaganur85512 жыл бұрын
Knew the benefits of artificial intelligence
@RELOADEDFI7 жыл бұрын
where can i get that movie recommentation?
@venkateshbabu56236 жыл бұрын
AI rules the world and extremely helpful for complex problems.
@venkateshbabu56236 жыл бұрын
Mostly research areas.
@charlesbrightman42377 жыл бұрын
The game of "life": Various countries have various super-computers that utilize humans as pawns. "Ha-Ha humans, you lose".
@sonofblessed5 жыл бұрын
37:00 - Is there a way to ensure that such a computer solves the task in a way that humans deem acceptable? This is an important question because people will begin relying on the solutions that these computers discover, solutions that are beyond our processing reach. If we blindly allow the computer to solve a problem as it deems fit, there will probably be some cases (or many) where we are not happy with the solution. Are there "morality algorithms" designed to abort solutions that conflict with predefined morality parameters, or at least with forbidden parameters?
@eddieramirez89705 жыл бұрын
Such as the Law of Robotics created by Dr. Asimov, IE First Law "A robot may not injure a human being or, through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm. Second Law "A Robot must obey the orders given it by human beings except where such orders would conflict with the First Law." Third Law "A Robot must protect it's own existence as long as such protection does not conflict with the First or Second Laws." I would add another Law that Limits the Definitions of a Human Being to include ALL Human Beings, because people tend to Dehumanize others such as in a war by calling them all sorts of Names a Labels in order to dehumanize them so they will not feel any Guilt when they Kill Them!!!!!
@gabrielakessler51165 жыл бұрын
In Germany you are never never never allowed to change field an carrier, because german psychologist forbid this at german universities and where they expand!
@chadsmith665 жыл бұрын
Yang 2020
@JoachimderZweite5 жыл бұрын
I will never buy into Artificial Intelligence until the "waking up" moment of incipient consciousness.
@sighthoundman5 жыл бұрын
I will never buy into consciousness as the defining line of intelligence until I see it more than a handful of my students.
@jeffbezos56326 жыл бұрын
imagine neural networks connected by block chain, now thats what i call singularity.
@fallenangel21235 жыл бұрын
🖕- that's what I call singularity (if the computers in the network are quantum) = we're F...
@reimannx336 жыл бұрын
Very informative, and well presented. Can those algorithms operating at the fundamental level of deep learning , not the ones operating at the intermediate layers, dynamically evolve ? And what about the resetting of those initial fundamental parameters initially without human intervention? The implications of that is fodder for philosophers and science fiction writers ...for now...
@TheNoodlyAppendage5 жыл бұрын
38:33 It is not software that is learned, it is data. Software is the codebase and instructions, and perhaps inclusive of any special data files used to initialize the program. The database which is accumulated is data though.
@renehenriksen17355 жыл бұрын
Well the best we´ve seen in AI is when Deep Blue defeated Kasparov in chess in 1997, and when Alphazero appeared on the scene and defeated the world´s best by then best chessprogram Stockfish not long ago. Still there´s a long way to go until AI can traffic among humans. Still it can´t behave like humans or show true human emotions, not to mention to show human will, independence or human dishonesty and cheat-attitude. So one thing is to show intelligence, but there´s more to humans than that.
@MrCmon1135 жыл бұрын
The most impressive result is probably the latent space of faces. But yes, that's not about planning (or "cheat attitude" as you call it).
@MrWaterbugdesign5 жыл бұрын
If deep learning requires vast amounts of data, relevant data I assume, then I don't see how computer programming would end because deep learning could only work for known things. Software for a space probe would hopefully find unknown things. Deep learning could be used for most of the probe's functions but I don't think all.
@hippophile6 жыл бұрын
I should like to play dice with this guy for money, his probabilities are a bit off at 53:30! But the principle is sound... Doesn't detract from an interesting seminar, though. FWIW an alternative illustration might be the old "scissors, paper, stone" game. There your dice only need two sides and you only need three "dice" each having a different two of the three objects.