Sunday, June 12, 2016

Artificial Intelligence News Issue 48

Welcome to the Momenta Learning News on Artificial Intelligence. This is issue 48, please feel free to share this post.
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The race to monetize artificial intelligence is on

Artificial intelligence is becoming one of the most exciting technology trends in the market. Companies like IBM, Microsoft, Apple, Google, Facebook and Amazon are actively leveraging AI as part of their technology stacks. However, in order to dominate the market, these vendors will need to monetize AI at a large scale.

How connectivity puts artificial intelligence in its place

UK director, Qualtrics Ian McVey is UK director at Qualtrics, an employee engagement firm. In this article, he explores the state of artificial intelligence. Last week, the Institute of Directors (IoD) warned that 15 million jobs are at risk from the rise of automation, a figure echoed by the Bank of England.

How Artificial Intelligence Can Boost Google's Cloud Revenue

Google (NASDAQ: GOOG) (NASDAQ: GOOGL) CEO Sundar Pichai said at the Google I/O conference that the company has built a Tensor Processing Unit (TPU) as part of its AI (artificial intelligence) initiative. Google built an AI computer system for Chinese board game Go which beat a human player.

Google Develops Artificial Intelligence With Human-Level Speech Capability

First Posted: May 31, 2016 10:10 AM EDT Google's artificial intelligence is reported to be developed under the supervision of Ray Kurzweil, a computer scientist and futurist. According to reports, he was hired by the company in 2012 to work on the natural language recognition.

Will Artificial Intelligence Influence Future Fed Policy?

Watch the video Will Artificial Intelligence Influence Future Fed Policy? on Yahoo Finance . May 31 -- Bloomberg Businessweek's Chris Condon discusses the impact of artificial intelligence on Fed policy. He speaks with Bloomberg's David Gura and Shery Ahn on "Bloomberg Markets."

Artificial Intelligence Spots More Offensive Photos Than Humans On Our Site: Facebook

Washington: In an attempt to combat hate speech, Facebook has said its artificial intelligence (AI) systems now report more offensive photos than humans do, which can help remove such content before it hurts the sentiments of people. When users upload something offensive to disturb people, it normally has to be seen and flagged by at least one person.

See The Difference One Year Makes In Artificial Intelligence Research

Last June, Google wrote that it was teaching its artificial intelligence algorithms to generate images of objects, or "dream." The A.I. tried to generate pictures of things it had seen before, like dumbbells. But it ran into a few problems. It was able to successfully make objects shaped like dumbbells, but each had disembodied arms sticking out from the handles, because arms and dumbbells were closely associated.

The Race to Monetize Artificial Intelligence First, Better - DATAVERSITY

by Angela Guess Jesus Rodriguez recently wrote in CIO.com, "The battle in the artificial intelligence (A.I.) market has been heating up. IBM, Microsoft, Amazon, Apple, Facebook, and Google are all continuously releasing impressive technologies in the space that are capturing the minds of developers and customers. From a market perspective, A.I.

How Facebook Uses Artificial Intelligence to Teach Computers to Read

Each day on Facebook, millions of people comment about baby photos, discuss presidential hopeful Donald Trump's latest musings, or share their thoughts on the latest blockbuster movie. Put simply, Facebook users love to communicate on the social network, and that communication translates to a lot of text.

Nasdaq testing artificial intelligence systems to track rogue traders

Nasdaq Inc. is trying to identify would-be white-collar criminals by using artificial intelligence systems originally built to track terrorists and sex traffickers. The exchange is testing systems that analyze data about trading activity against what traders say on their corporate chat and email accounts, in an effort to spot potential insider trading, market manipulation and other crimes faster and more accurately than current surveillance systems can.

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