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Showing posts with label artificial intelligence law. Show all posts
Showing posts with label artificial intelligence law. Show all posts

19 of The World's Largest Tech Companies ORDERED to REVEAL Algorithms Behind Their Latest AI Developments....

ai in europe

The European Commission is making 19 tech giants, including Amazon, Google, TikTok, and YouTube, reveal their AI algorithms under the Digital Services Act. This is a significant step towards making AI more transparent and accountable, and ultimately, improving our lives.

As we know, AI is expected to impact every aspect of our lives, from healthcare to education, to even how well we write. However, it also generates fear, such as concerns about machines becoming smarter than us or causing harm inadvertently. To avoid these risks, transparency and accountability will be crucial for AI to benefit us positively.

The EU Artificial Intelligence Act aims to achieve this goal. By sharing commercial information with regulators before using AI for sensitive practices such as hiring, companies can be held accountable for the outcomes of their algorithms. EU rules could quickly become the global standard, making this a significant development in AI regulation.

However, there's always a balance to strike when it comes to regulation. The major tech companies view AI as the next big thing, and innovation in this field is now a geopolitical race. Too much regulation could stifle progress, but at the same time, we need to make sure that companies are accountable for their algorithms' outcomes.

Companies will also need to answer any questions the commission members have about their AI projects.

\This is a significant development for AI regulation that will benefit everyone. By making AI more transparent and accountable, we can ensure that it improves our lives and avoids the potential risks.

Will They Even Have The Answers?

Interestingly, AI researchers are increasingly devoting time to understanding what AI is doing. Sometimes they can dig into the data and identify particular parameters on which the AI relies heavily. However, explaining why AI did or said something can be like explaining a magic trick without knowing the secret. 

This may be the most alarming revelation from these hearings – the creators don't always understand their creations.

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Author: Trevor Kingsley
Tech News CITY /New York Newsroom

The Next Generation, Building The Next Generation Of Technology...

Our every day lives are filled with and dominated by computers, to the extent that I would be hard pressed to know what items in my home are typically not connected to a computer.  We use computers all day, using it as an interconnected system that delivers information to us.

As the tech gets more complex, so does what people are inventing with it.  Here's some highlights from a recent discussion with some of the smartest students in America who are already working on their first inventions.  


The first invention is called "Thermodynamics builder" - which is very important for the manufacture of thermodynamically sound computers. This is the method used to conduct thermodynamic experiments in a highly complex environment. 

The Thermodynamics of a Computer I used to be involved with the field of electronics. I was also involved in the design of many computers. After I completed my PhD I applied for a job as a mathematician (the software engineering job in the Department of Physics at Northwestern University). This was after I had completed my computer studies at Stanford University as well as my lab at Stanford University. 

I was hired to build and test products and services at the Apple Computer and in the development of the new Apple Macintosh. These products and services are called the "Apples" and Apple Mac computers. In 1979 I went to Germany where I went to start a computer research project I called the "Apprentice Computer Science Institute" (APIS) in Erfurt (Germany). I was a computer scientist at the APIS.


Next is the "Molecular Mechanism and the Mechanism of Control and Controlled Release" - which was first applied in the field of cellular and molecular-organism physiology in 1992 by R. F. T. Tylen, an MIT graduate student. In the early 1990s, many in the field of molecular-organism physiology (MOC) realized there was a lot of confusion over this problem. 

As more and more researchers, including me, realized what they had known for certain for decades, the situation became increasingly difficult to overcome. 

These new discoveries were made much more widely in the early 1990s, especially during the last decade of the 20th century. The first such discoveries, under the name of "Cetyl-Alcohol-and-Cetyl-Phosphonic-And-N-3-Cholinesterase," were made during the 1960s by Dr. John L. Rummel III at the University of California–Davis where he first began his career in the biomedical field of molecular-organism physiology. Rummel would then go on to become the Director of the Institute...


Lastly, what they're calling the "Growth Stabilizer" - It allows you to make any shape, shape, or form that you desire in a single application and you can do so with the help of a simple user interface. The Growth Stabilizer is a patent pending system of self-organizing micro machines that you can program to grow or deform the body of any kind of living thing such as a sheep, a tree, a leaf, or even a tree in a space. 

The Growth Stabilizer is a very powerful device (you just need to select the shape and shape and click OK). It is designed to be used in many different ways. I hope to share more of my Growth Stabilizer experiences in the future and I hope to share more of my Growth Stabilizer experience in the future.

So, let's take a look at the Growth Stabilizer: have a few things to say and this is all the info that I have. Growth Stabilizer Technology – A new way for me to get started with my own business!

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Jin Hong
Berkeley Newsroom

Lawyers Beware: Artificial Intelligence Is Learning Law - And Doing Frighteningly Well...

AI or artificial intelligence is starting to find its footing in the legal field. The world is now on the brink of revolution in legal profession spearheaded with the extensive use of AI in the entire industry, specifically by the in-house lawyers.

Just like how email greatly changed the way people conduct their business on a daily basis, AI is also expected to become an ever-present force and an invaluable assistant to almost all lawyers.

But the million dollar question now is, what does the future look like for AI as far as the legal industry is concerned? A much bigger question is, will AI soon replace real life lawyers? And if this ever happens, would there be moral or ethical dilemmas that must be taken into consideration when it comes to AI and its use and adoption in the legal field?

What’s the Future of AI in Law?

If you will consider the future of artificial intelligence in the legal field, there are several certainties here. First off, those that fail to embrace and adopt this change are going to fall behind the rest in one way or another. Second, those that actually choose to use AI will get the chance to enjoy more freedom to tackle two things that they always lack enough time for: advising and thinking.

AI in Law – How Technology Helps Lawyers 

These exciting developments in technology initially don’t seem to leave much room where human lawyers can get involved. But, technology helps a lot in making the lives of lawyers so much easier, simpler and more flexible.

Thanks to technology, legal professionals get the chance to work from the comforts of their home with the use of remote desktop programs and cloud software. But, these are comparatively outdated. Good thing there are now companies that connect barristers and law firms with freelance paralegals and law students that allow quick and easy outsourcing of tasks with no need for an entire legal team to stay in one office or building.

This kind of advancements not only allows lawyers in law firms to have more efficient work as they also change how lawyers interact with their clients that moves away from the usual solicitor’s firm.

Will AI Technology Replace Lawyers?

There is very little chance that these changes in technology will push real life lawyers to the side anytime soon. While AI and similar automated programs are excellent resources, there is still a substantial limit to what these logical and formulaic programs can do and achieve.

On the other hand, people skills have become more valuable than ever because the only way for technology to take over is if clients are also robots themselves.

What Will Be the Impact on Technology on Today’s Legal Field?

Technological innovations will continue reflecting the needs of clients. There is no doubt that AI will change how lawyers work and hopefully, it will also make daily tasks such as legal research and drafting more cost effective and efficient. But at the end of the day, clients will still prefer to have an experienced and real legal adviser by their side who knows how to use the latest technology to their full advantage while keeping a good interpersonal relationship.

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Author: Mellionardv