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Monthly Archives: February 2020
How to save America with artificial intelligence | TheHill – The Hill
Posted: February 27, 2020 at 2:15 am
Political polarization is ripping America apart. References to a second American civil war no matter how far-fetched reveal a bitterly divided nation. Indeed, the Founding Fathers worst nightmare is coming to pass.
For all of its promise, technology bears much of the blame for fracturing America. For one, social media platforms create powerful echo chambers that feed us a nonstop diet of one-sided, hyper-partisan news and commentary. This dangerous phenomenon where our beliefs are constantly reinforced and rarely challenged is not unique to liberals or conservatives. Instead, it is a function of technology capitalizing on an ever-expanding cultural and social divide.
But what if technology could be harnessed to reverse this corrosive effect on American society and its underlying cause? Moreover, at a time when factual news reporting is all too often immediately dismissed as fake, we are in desperate need of voices broadly respected by all Americans.
Enter Americas Founding Fathers and machine learning.
Despite the passage of centuries, Americans of all political stripes continue to invoke the ideas and writings of the Founders. Few figures hold more sway or command more respect among political pundits, politicians and everyday patriots than Adams, Hamilton, Jay, Jefferson, Madison and Washington.
While it may seem far-fetched on its face, what if artificial intelligence and machine learning could bring these titans of history back to life to weigh in on the challenges facing the United States today?
Artificial intelligence, in short, amounts to providing machines with enough data to make decisions or predictions without human input. Autonomous cars, for example, drive around American cities gathering real-time experience to inform decision-making. The challenge with driverless cars, however, is that staggering amounts of data are required to predict the many surprises that these machines are likely to encounter on the road.
But when it comes Americas Founding Fathers, we have all the data that we need in their writings, speeches and legislative records to resurrect them through machine learning. Indeed, the Founders discussed and debated the most contentious issues from the media to taxation, education, religion and beyond that America confronts today. Human nature, after all, ensures that history tends to repeat itself.
Bringing the Founders back through artificial intelligence processes would bestow enormous benefits. For one, the addition of such revered and respected voices would allow us to regain some semblance of civility in public discourse. Indeed, it would be difficult to denigrate Jefferson or Madisons take on contemporary issues such as the national debt or impeachment as partisan fake news.
Most importantly, the most corrosive effects of hyper-partisan, ratings-driven media outlets and the social media platforms that enable them would be blunted, reining in the extreme division and political polarization gripping America.
To be sure, significant challenges would accompany such an ambitious venture. The process of coding the Founders writings and records into mathematical vectors digestible by machines could prove complex, stretching current capabilities to their limitations. The same is true for the all-important task of accurately translating the issues dividing America today into machine-readable data. But the good news is that significant groundwork has been done in this arena: Artificial intelligence and neural networks already conduct political predictions as well as complex, issue-based analyses.
With little potential for profit, securing adequate funding for such an endeavor will also prove challenging. But thanks to initiatives such as Googles Artificial Intelligence for Social Good and grants supporting AI-enabled fact-checking, there is reason for optimism. Indeed, the inherently ethical and positively disruptive nature of such technology may attract broad support from an ideologically diverse cross-section of civically-minded institutions and individuals.
Ultimately, the Founding Founders lasting gift to the American people is a treasure trove of wisdom on civil discourse, shared values and sound governance. At a time when America finds itself dangerously divided, we must not hesitate to harness the Founding Fathers collective legacy for the betterment of the nation that they cherished so dearly.
Marik von Rennenkampff served as an analyst with the U.S. Department of States Bureau of International Security and Nonproliferation, as well as an Obama administration appointee at the U.S. Department of Defense. Follow him on Twitter @MvonRen.
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Artificial intelligence and machine learning for data centres and edge computing to feature at Datacloud Congress 2020 in Monaco – Data Economy
Posted: at 2:15 am
Vertiv EMEA president Giordano Albertazzi looks back on data center expansion in the Nordics and the regions role as an efficient best execution venue for the future.
At the start of the new year its natural to look to thefuture. But its also worth taking some time to think back to the past.
Last year was not only another period of strong data center growthglobally, and in the Nordic region specifically, but also the end of a decadeof sustained digital transformation.
There have been dramatic shifts over the last ten years butthe growth in hyperscale facilities is one of the most defining and one withwhich the Nordic region is very well acquainted.
According to figures from industry analysts Synergy Researchthe total number of hyperscale sites has tripled since 2013 and there are nowmore than 500 such facilities worldwide
And it seems that growth shows no signs of abating. Accordingto Synergy, in addition to the 504 current hyperscale data centers, a further151 that are at various stages of planning or building.
A good numberof those sites will be sited in the Nordics if recent history is anything to goby. The region has already seen significant investment from cloud andhyperscale operators such as Facebook, AWS and Apple. Google was also one ofthe early entrants and invested $800 million inits Hamina, Finland facility in 2010. It recently announced plans to invest a further $600 million in an expansion ofthat site.
I was lucky enough to speak at the recent DataCloud Nordicsevent at the end of last year. My presentation preceded Googles country manager,Google Cloud, Denmark and Finland, Peter Harden, who described the companysgrowth plans for the region. Hamina, Finland is one of Googles mostsustainable facilities thanks in no small part to its Nordics location whichenables 100% renewable energy and innovative sea water cooling.
Continuing that theme of sustainability, if the last decadehas been about keeping pace with data demand, then the next ten years will beabout continued expansion but importantly efficient growth in the right locations,using the right technology and infrastructure. The scale of growth beingpredicted billions of new edge devices for example will necessitate asustainable approach.
That future we at Vertiv, and others, believe will be basedaround putting workloads where they make most sense from a cost, risk, latency,security and efficiency perspective. Or as industry analysts 451 Research putsit: TheBest Execution Venue (BEV). (a slightlyunwieldy term but an accurate one). BEV refers to the specific ITinfrastructure an app or workload should run on cloud, on-premise or at theedge for example but could also equally apply to geographic location of datacenters.
In that BEV future, the Nordics will become increasingly important for hosting a variety of workloads but the sweet-spot could be those that are less latency sensitive high performance compute (HPC) for example and can therefore benefit from the stable, renewable and cheap power as well as the abundance of free cooling. Several new sub-sea cables coming online over the near future will also address some of the connectivity issues the region has faced.
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A recent study by the Nordic Council of Ministers estimatesthat approximately EUR 2.2 bn. have been invested in the Nordics on initiateddata centre construction works over the last 12 to 18 months (2018). Mainlywithin hyperscale and cloud infrastructure. This number could exceed EUR 4 bn.annually within the next five to seven years because of increasing marketdemand and a pipeline of planned future projects.
Vertiv recently conducted some forward-looking research thatappears to reinforce the Nordics future potential. Vertiv first conducted itsData Center 2025 research back in 2014 to understand where the industry thoughtit was headed. In 2019, weupdated that study to find out how attitudes had shifted in the interveningfive years a half way point if you will be between 2014 and 2025.
The survey of more than 800 data center experts covers a range of technology areas but lets focus on a few that are important and relevant to the Nordics.
We mentioned the edge a little earlier when talking about BEV.Vertiv has identified fourkey edge archetypes that cover the edge use cases that our experts believewill drive edge deployments in the future. According to the 2025 research, ofthose participants who have edge sites today, or expect to have edge sites in2025, 53% expect the number of edge sites they support to grow by at least 100%with 20% expecting an increase of 400% or more.
So along with providing a great venue for future colo and cloud growth, the Nordics, like other regions, is also likely to see strong edge growth. That edge demand will require not only new data center form-factors such as prefabricated modular (PFM) data center designs but also monitoring and management software and specialist services.
Another challenge around edge compute, and the core for thatmatter, is energy availability and increasingly, access to clean, renewableenergy.
The results of the 2025 research revealed that respondentsare perhaps more realistic and pragmatic about the importance and access toclean power than back in 2014. Participants in the original survey projected22% of data center power would come from solar and an additional 12% from windby 2025. Thats a little more than one-third of data center power from thesetwo renewable sources, which seemed like an unrealistic projection at the time.
This years numbers for solar and wind (13% and 8% respectively) seem more realistic. However, importantly for Nordics countries with an abundance of hydropower, participants in this years survey expect hydro to be the largest energy source for data centers in 2025.
The data center 2025 research, also looked at one of theother big drivers for building capacity in the Nordics: access to efficientcooling.
According to the 2025 survey, around 42% of respondentsexpect future cooling requirements to be met by mechanical cooling systems. Liquidcooling and outside air also saw growth from 20% in 2014 to 22% in 2019, likelydriven by the more extreme rack densities being observed today. This growth inthe use of outside air obviously benefits temperate locations like the Nordics.
In summary, if the last ten years have been about simplykeeping up with data center demand, the next ten years will be about addingpurposeful capacity in the most efficient, sustainable and cost-effective way:the right data center type, thermal and power equipment, and location for theright workloads.
If the past is anything to go by, the Nordics will have an important role to play in that future.
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VODA.ai Raises A Second Round of Funding for Its Artificial Intelligence Based "Virtual Pipe Condition Assessment" Solution to Predict Water…
Posted: at 2:15 am
BOSTON, Feb. 26, 2020 /PRNewswire/ --VODA.aiis excited to announce an Innospark Ventures led round of fundraising froma group of investors, including the Massachusetts Clean Energy Center (MassCEC).
The new investment round will enableVODA.ai to capitalize on its position as a leader in theapplication of Artificial Intelligence to serve the waterindustry globally. Smart water and city leaders are deploying VODA.ai's technology to proactively manage their aging water main pipes against water loss, disruptive breaks, and premature pipe replacements.
Product innovation is a key area of focus forVODA.ai.The funding will allow VODA.ai to focus on expanding product offerings to further increase customer benefits.
"Innospark Ventures and MassCEC are leaders in AI and the environment," VODA.ai CEO, George Demosthenous said. "We are all excited about our potential to positively impact customers and the communities they serve."
"We are thrilled to partner with VODA.ai as they embark on their journey to make water systems more efficient and more responsive to both consumers and the environment. George and the team are a shining example of what the Innospark team gets most excited about:AI for Good"said Dr. Venkat Srinivasan, Managing Director, Innospark Ventures.
"VODA.ai's technology is helping municipalities address some of their greatest energy, environmental, and operational challenges," said MassCEC CEO, Stephen Pike. "This fundraising fills a critical gap as the company grows its business."
About the Company
VODA.ai is an AI company founded in 2017 by experienced AI and water industry entrepreneurs. It helps utilities worldwide to make more informed decisions. It is headquartered in Boston, MA and operates in markets worldwide.
About Innospark
InnosparkVenturesis a new breed of early stage investor. They invest in bold founders leveraging AI to create a differential impact on society.
About the Massachusetts Clean Energy Center
The mission of MassCEC, a quasi-public entity, is to grow the state's clean energy economy and help meet the Commonwealth's energy, climate, and economic development goals.
James C. FitchettChief Operating Officer and Co-Founder978-502-1782234886@email4pr.com
voda.ai
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Top US Insurers and Automakers using Artificial Intelligence-Based Services from Agero to Improve Driver Assistance – GlobeNewswire
Posted: at 2:15 am
MEDFORD, Mass., Feb. 26, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Agero, a market leader in software-enabled driver assistance services for automotive manufacturers and insurance providers in North America, today announced that its advanced artificial intelligence (AI) services are now in use by eleven clients, including four of the top six insurance providers and one of North Americas largest automakers to improve driver assistance for millions of motorists in the U.S.
The award winningCommand Center, part of Ageros Managed Services, uses predictive analytics and machine learning developed from over 50 million events to combat unexpected delays in delivering roadside assistance caused by traffic, weather, high service volume and more. Command Center leverages real-time data to identify events that are trending outside expected service windows, and escalates those events for rapid recovery in order to dramatically improve the experience for drivers in their time of need. The result is up to a 30% reduction in customer complaints and the transformation of high-risk roadside events into positive, memorable experiences.
Breakdowns are a hugely stressful event for motorists, and everyone wants help to arrive as quickly as possible, notes Jeff Blecher, Ageros chief strategy officer. Predicting when and where potential problems will occur during delivery of that assistance and quickly recovering when they do is critical to ensuring the best customer experience for motorists on behalf of our insurance and auto clients.
Command Centers powerful ProactiveETA prediction model and proprietary machine learning algorithms have been trained through tens of millions of actual events to understand the impact of traffic, weather patterns, unexpected volume and other factors and compare that data with service provider and motorist location in real time to anticipate delays. The tool identifies and escalates at-risk cases early, before an arrival time is missed and often before the problem even becomes visible to motorists, across every zip code in the U.S. When problems do occur, highly trained case managers armed with Command Centers data proactively engage both service provider and motorist, doing what it takes to resolve issues and provide exceptional customer care.
Motorists are quick to recognize the high-touch service from Command Center, responding with effusive praise for the proactive contact and service escalation, and the repeated follow-up to ensure service and safety. Policyholder and vehicle owner compliments frequently include the sentiment that the insurer/OEM has earned a customer for life.
A days actual customer feedback includes:
I'm not from the area and my wife had a stroke so I was travelling to see her at the hospital. Debbie made the process so much easier and even found a place to get a new tire. She went above and beyond and must've called everyone in N.Y. to try and get me back on my way. Even when I called back in for an update I was transferred back to Debbie so I would not have to explain my situation again. motorist, December 21, 2019.
Ryan really helped me out today. I was stuck for hours and he spoke with me through the process, and went the extra mile to assist! I was afraid, and wasn't sure if I was going to get out, but Ryan kept checking if I was safe the entire time and made sure the help did arrive. motorist, December 21, 2019.
I have been a customer with [Insurance Company] for 40 years. Elaine is a good example of what customer service is all about. She is professional. She is polite. She is patient. She fixed my issue. motorist, December 21, 2019.
Consumer expectations for fast, seamless and transparent service have impacted every sector of the economy, including roadside assistance, driving ever greater need for responsive customer experiences. Agero covers 115 million motorists and two-thirds of all new cars in the U.S., putting the company in a unique position to combine the scale, data expertise and event volume needed to power an innovative AI-powered service like Command Center.
For more information on Command Center, please visit: https://info.agero.com/command_center. Additional details on Agero Roadside Managed Services can be obtained here; a sales representative can be contacted here.
About AgeroAgeros mission is to safeguard consumers on the road through a unique combination of platform intelligence and human powered solutions, strengthening our clients relationships with their drivers. We are a leading provider of driving solutions, including roadside assistance, accident management, consumer affairs and telematics. The company protects 115 million vehicles in partnership with leading automobile manufacturers, insurance carriers and other diversified clients. Managing one of the largest national networks of service providers, Agero responds to more than 12 million requests annually for assistance. Agero, a member company of The Cross Country Group, is headquartered in Medford, Mass., with operations throughout North America. To learn more, visit http://www.agero.comand follow on Twitter@AgeroNews.
Media Contact:
Kate PattyPR Manager, AgeroKPatty@agero.com781.306.3771
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Artificial Intelligence and Big Data forms focus on ENGEL’s medical technology conference – Plastics Insight
Posted: at 2:15 am
The medical technology conference med.con 2020, hosted by ENGEL at its Technologieforum in Stuttgart during mid February, was a huge success. The conference was a full house as more than 100 delegates attended it.
The main talk point at the conference was patient safety through advanced technology and was discussed from the various perspectives of plastics processing in the cleanroom and conveyed in a tangible way using live machine exhibits.
With artificial intelligence and big data being the focus, it was deliberated that the potential for more quality, safety, and cost-efficiency in medical technology is yet to be fully exploited.
Summing up the massive challenge that the volume of data generated is increasing, but the use of the data is not, Uwe Herbert, IT manager at Ypsomed, a manufacturer of injection systems for self-medication, in his keynote address mentions, We are passing up opportunities here
Uwe advocates that it is necessary to link the IT system of the individual department in the company and provide the employees with the freedom they need to experiment with the new possibilities to improve the quality of the products and reduce the unit costs. However, according to Uwe, the complexity of these projects is often underestimated.
Speaking of artificial intelligence, Christian Pommereau, principal engineer with pharmaceutical company Sanofi-Aventis Deutschland, emphasizes, We need to shift up a gear when it comes to artificial intelligence. To avoid the plastics processing industry losing touch, we need everyone around the table, adds Christian. He has witnessed within his own group of companies how far ahead the drug production industry is in this field.
Both the above-mentioned speakers sparked a lively discussion. It became clear that the industry has long recognized the great potential that Industry 4.0 has to offer. But obstacles often remain to adopt the new technologies for reflecting the specific requirements of cleanroom production. For instance, the validation of dynamic process control with the help of intelligent assistance, an important feature of the smart factory, has to be planned in detail and designed safely.
Christoph Lhota, vice president, ENGEL medical, reported on how ENGELs iQ weight control assistance system can be integrated into rules and regulations accepted by the auditors, based on ongoing development work.
The ENGEL developers have investigated various approaches to the validation process and ultimately derived a procedure that defines process windows for the parameters to be retroactively adjusted, enabling the validation of dynamically controlled processes in conformity with both EN ISO and the FDA.
In his keynote, Christoph gave an outlook on other topics that are gaining in importance in medical technology and on which ENGELs developers are working intensively. These comprise of injection molding of liquid silicone rubber in the cleanroom, efficient injection molding of very small batch sizes and sterile injection molding, like cleanroom class ISO 5 is increasingly required in plastics processing.
Talking about ISO 5, Christoph informs, It is a totally different planet. The opening speed of the injection molding machine is significant here. To specifically adapt its machines, robots and technologies to this new class of requirements, ENGEL operates its own clean room at its headquarters in Schwertberg.
Among the eight presentations during the keynote session, other speakers were Martin Maier from Waldorf Technik, Reinhard Steger from Braunform, Martin Jungbluth from Max Petek Reinraumtechnik, and Jrg Leonhartsberger and Claus Wilde from ENGEL.
During the conference, especially in the breaks, and following the talks, ENGEL opened up its technology center with live exhibits and a partner exhibition.
ENGELs high level of expertise in systems solutions was noticeable in the clean room injection molding applications. Sophisticated medical products were manufactured in highly-integrated and automated production cells throughout the event.
There were thick-walled housing parts which can be produced in an 8-cavity mold using servo-electric Vario-Spinstack technology from Hack Formenbau in particularly short cycle times and with a correspondingly low unit cost, thanks to the two-component process.
It also showcased needle holders for 1 ml safety syringes in a 16-cavity mold by Fostag Formenbau with a particularly low shot weight of 0.08 grams per part. The needle holders very thin and different wall thicknesses require extremely precise process control, which ENGEL ensures with iQ weight control.
The needle holders are taken off by a viper linear robot and transferred to the pipe distribution system, developed by ENGEL and made completely of stainless steel, in order to package the filigree mouded parts sorted by cavity.
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Air Travelers Cant See All of It, but More Tech Is Moving Them Along – The New York Times
Posted: at 2:15 am
The time an airplane spends waiting for a gate after landing or waiting in line to take off could also be reduced. A group at SITA focused on airport management systems is helping to design technology that can synthesize data from many sources, including changing aircraft arrival times, weather conditions at destination airports and logistical issues to improve runway schedules and gate assignments.
Artificial intelligence software can also make a difference with rebooking algorithms, Mr. Etzioni said. When weather or mechanical issues disrupt travel, the airlines speed in recomputing, rerouting and rescheduling matters, he said.
The data streams get even more complex when the whole airport is considered, Ms. Stein of SITA said. A number of airports are creating a digital twin of their operations using central locations with banks of screens that show the systems, people and objects at the airport, including airplane locations and gate activity, line lengths at security checkpoints, and the heating, cooling and electrical systems monitored by employees who can send help when needed. These digital systems can also be used to help with emergency planning.
The same types of thermal, audio and visual sensors that can be used to supply data to digital twins are also being used to reduce equipment breakdowns. Karen Panetta, the dean of graduate engineering at Tufts University and a fellow at the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, said hand-held thermal imagers used before takeoff and after landing can alert maintenance crews if an area inside the airplanes engine or electrical system is hotter than normal, a sign something may be amiss. The alert would help the crew schedule maintenance right away, rather than be forced to take the aircraft out of service at an unexpected time and inconvenience passengers.
At the moment, people, rather than technology, evaluate most of the data collected, Dr. Panetta said. But eventually, with enough data accumulated and shared, more A.I. systems could be built and trained to analyze the data and recommend actions faster and more cost effectively, she said.
Air travel isnt the only segment of the transportation industry to begin using artificial intelligence and machine learning systems to reduce equipment failure. In the maritime industry, a Seattle company, ioCurrents, digitally monitors shipping vessel engines, generators, gauges, winches and a variety of other mechanical systems onboard. Their data is transmitted in real time to a cloud-based A.I. analytics platform, which flags potential mechanical issues for workers on the ship and on land.
A.I. systems like these and others will continue to grow in importance as passenger volume increases, Ms. Stein said. Airports can only scale so much, build so much and hire so many people.
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What to do about artificially intelligent government | TheHill – The Hill
Posted: at 2:15 am
The White Houses recent efforts to chart a national artificial intelligence (AI) policy are welcome and, frankly, overdue. Funding for AI research and updating agency IT systems is a good start. So is guidance for agencies as they begin to regulate industry use of AI. But theres a glaring gap: The White House has been silent about the rules that apply when agencies use AI to perform critical governance tasks.
This matters because, of all the ways AI is transforming our world, some of the most worrying come at the intersection of AI and the awesome power of the state. AI drives the facial recognition police use to surveil citizens. It enables the autonomous weapons changing warfare. And it powers the tools judges use to make life-changing bail, sentencing and parole decisions. Concerns about each have fueled debate and, as to facial recognition in particular, new laws banning use.
Sitting just beyond the headlines, however, is a little-known fact: AI use already is pervasive in government. Prohibition for most uses is not an option, or at least not a wise one. Needed instead is a frank conversation about how to give the government the resources it needs to develop high-quality and fairly deployed AI tools and build sensible accountability mechanisms around their use.
We know because we led a team of lawyers and computer scientists at Stanford and New York universities to advise federal agencies on how to develop and oversee their new algorithmic toolkit.
Our research shows that AI use spans government. By our estimates, half of major federal agencies have experimented with AI. Among the 160 AI uses we found, some such as facial recognition are fueling public outcries. But many others fly under the radar. The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) uses AI to flag insider trading; the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services uses it to ferret out health care fraud. The Social Security Administration is piloting AI tools to help decide who gets disability benefits, and the Patent and Trademark Office to decide who gets patent protection.
Still other agencies are developing AI tools to communicate with the public, by sifting millions of consumer complaints or using chatbots to field questions from welfare beneficiaries, asylum seekers and taxpayers.
Our research also highlights AIs potential to make government work better and at lower cost. AI tools that help administrative judges spot errors in draft decisions can shrink backlogs that leave some veterans waiting years (sometimes, close to a decade) for benefits. AI can help ensure that the decision to launch a potentially ruinous enforcement action does not reflect the mistakes, biases, or whims of human prosecutors. And AI can help make more precise judgments about which drugs threaten public health.
But the picture is not all rosy.
First, the government has a long way to go. Our teams computer scientists found that few agency AI uses rival the sophistication found in the private sector, making it harder to realize accuracy and efficiency gains. Some may wish to keep agencies low-tech to limit surveillance or otherwise hamstring government. Its not that simple: Government use of makeshift and insecure AI systems puts everyone at risk. Disabled persons, veterans and all of us deserve better.
Second, AI poses deep accountability challenges. When public officials make decisions affecting rights, the law generally requires an explanation. This reason-giving requirement is deeply embedded in law and even enshrined in the Constitution. Yet sophisticated AI tools are opaque; they do not serve up explanations with their outputs. A crucial challenge is how to subject these tools to meaningful accountability and ensure fidelity to longstanding commitments to transparency, reason-giving and non-discrimination.
To address concerns, agencies could be required to politically ventilate AI tools the way they must new regulations. Or they could be made to benchmark AI tools, reserving a pool of cases for human decision and comparing results to AI-assisted ones. However, there are no one-size-fits-all solutions. Open-sourcing computer code might make sense when agencies distribute welfare benefits. But disclosing details when tax enforcers use AI to identify cheaters will just aid evasion.
Third, if we want agencies to make responsible use of AI, their capacity must come from within. Our research shows that many of the best-designed AI tools were created by innovative, public-spirited agency technologists not profit-driven private contractors. The AI tools that help adjudicate disability benefits at the Social Security Administration came from agency insiders with intimate knowledge of governing law and how administrative judges work.
This makes sense. Government work is often complex. Recruiting skilled technologists and updating outmoded computing systems is crucial to building high-quality AI tools and administering them fairly. But it wont be cheap.
Last, AI can fuel political anxieties. Government AI use creates a risk of gaming by better-heeled groups with resources and knowhow. The SECs algorithmic predictions may fall more heavily on smaller companies that, unlike big Wall Street players, lack a stable of quants who can reverse-engineer the model and keep out of the agencys cross-hairs. If citizens come to believe AI systems are rigged, political support for a more effective, tech-savvy government will evaporate.
In short, this is a pivotal moment for government. Managed well, agency AI use can make the government more efficient, accurate and fair. Managed poorly, AI can widen the public-private technology gap, make agencies more vulnerable and less transparent, and heighten concerns about government arbitrariness and biases that are coursing through American politics.
Wherever the nation lands on facial recognition, government AI use is here to stay. The question now is which of these two visions becomes reality.
David F. Engstrom and Daniel E. Ho are professors of law at Stanford University. Catherine M. Sharkey is a professor of law at New York University. Mariano-Florentino Cullar is a justice on the California Supreme Court and professor of law at Stanford University.
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Global Enterprise Artificial Intelligence Market Expected to Grow with a CAGR of 35.4% Over the Forecast Period, 2019-2026 – ResearchAndMarkets.com -…
Posted: at 2:15 am
DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The "Enterprise Artificial Intelligence Market: Global Opportunity Analysis And Industry Forecast, 2019-2026" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering.
According to this report, the global enterprise artificial intelligence market was valued at $4.68 billion in 2018, and is projected to reach $53.06 billion by 2026, registering a CAGR of 35.4% from 2019 to 2026.
Artificial intelligence has been one of the fastest growing technologies in recent years. AI is associated to human intelligence with similar characteristics, such as language understanding, reasoning, learning, problem solving, and others. Manufacturers in the market witness enormous underlying intellectual challenges in the development and revision of such technology. AI is positioned at the core of the nextogen software technologies in the market. Companies, such as Google, IBM, Microsoft, and other leading players, have actively implemented AI as a crucial part of their technologies.
The increase in number of innovative start-ups and advancements in technology have led to rise in investment in artificial intelligence technologies. Moreover, escalating demand for analyzing and interpreting large amount of data boosts the requirement of artificial intelligence industry solutions. Moreover, development of more reliable cloud computing infrastructures and improvements in dynamic artificial intelligence solutions have a strong impact on the growth potential of the AI market. However, lack of trained and experienced staff hinders the growth of the enterprise Artificial Intelligence (AI) market. Furthermore, increase in adoption of AI in developing economies, such as China, and India are expected to provide major opportunities for the market growth in the upcoming years. Also, ongoing developments in smart virtual assistants and robots are anticipated to be opportunistic for the growth of the enterprise artificial intelligence (AI) market.
KEY BENEFITS
Key Topics Covered:
Chapter 1: Introduction
1.1. Report Description
1.2. Key Benefits For Stakeholders
1.3. Key Market Segments
1.4. Research Methodology
1.4.1. Secondary Research
1.4.2. Primary Research
1.4.3. Analyst Tools & Models
Chapter 2: Executive Summary
2.1. Cxo Perspective
Chapter 3: Market Overview
3.1. Market Definition And Scope
3.2. Key Findings
3.2.1. Top Investment Pockets
3.2.2. Top Impacting Factors
3.3. Porter'S Five Forces Analysis
3.4. Key Player Positioning, 2017
3.5. Market Dynamics
3.5.1. Drivers
3.5.1.1. Increasing Investment In Ai Technologies
3.5.1.2. Growing Need For Analyzing And Interpreting Large Amounts of Data
3.5.1.3. Increasing Customer Satisfaction And Adoption of Reliable Cloud Applications
3.5.2. Restraints
3.5.2.1. Lack of Trained And Experienced Staff
3.5.3. Opportunities
3.5.3.1. Increase In Adoption of Ai In Developing Economies
3.5.3.2. Developing Smarter Virtual Assistants And Robots
3.6. Market Evolution/ Industry Roadmap
Chapter 4: Global Enterprise Artificial Intelligence (Ai) Market, By Deployment Type
4.1. Market Overview
4.2. Cloud
4.2.1. Key Market Trends, Growth Factors, And Opportunities
4.2.2. Market Size And Forecast, By Region
4.2.3. Market Analysis, By Country
4.3. On-Premise
4.3.1. Key Market Trends, Growth Factors, And Opportunities
4.3.2. Market Size And Forecast, By Region
4.3.3. Market Analysis, By Country
Chapter 5: Global Enterprise Artificial Intelligence (Ai) Market, By Technology
5.1. Market Overview
5.2. Machine Learning
5.3. Natural Language Processing (Nlp)
5.4. Image Processing
5.5. Speech Recognition
Chapter 6: Global Enterprise Artificial Intelligence (Ai) Market, By Organization Size
6.1. Market Overview
6.2. Large Enterprises
6.3. Small And Medium Enterprises (Smes)
Chapter 7: Global Enterprise Artificial Intelligence (Ai) Market, By Industry Vertical
7.1. Market Overview
7.2. Media & Advertising
7.3. Bfsi
7.4. It & Telecom
7.5. Retail
7.6. Healthcare
7.7. Automotive & Transportation
7.8. Others
Chapter 8: Global Enterprise Artificial Intelligence (Ai) Market, By Region
8.1. Market Overview
8.2. North America
8.3. Europe
8.4. Asia-Pacific
8.5. LAMEA
Chapter 9: Competitive Landscape
9.1. Competitive Dashboard
9.2. Key Developments
9.3. Top Winning Strategies
Chapter 10: Company Profiles
10.1. Alphabet Inc.
10.2. Apple Inc.
10.3. Amazon Web Services, Inc.
10.4. International Business Machines Corporation
10.5. Ipsoft Inc.
10.6. Microstrategy Incorporated
10.7. Nvidia Corporation
10.8. Sap Se
10.9. Verint Systems Inc.
10.10. Wipro Limited
For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/w3dpp3
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Compliance technology will rely on artificial intelligence in the future – ELE Times
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Over 40% of privacy compliance technology will rely on artificial intelligence (AI) by 2023, up from 5% today, according to Gartner, Inc. Privacy laws, such as General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), presented a compelling business case for privacy compliance and inspired many other jurisdictions worldwide to follow, said Bart Willemsen, research vice president at Gartner.
More than 60 jurisdictions around the world have proposed or are drafting postmodern privacy and data protection laws as a result. Canada, for example, is looking to modernize their Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act (PIPEDA), in part to maintain the adequacy standing with the EU post-GDPR.
Privacy leaders are under pressure to ensure that all personal data processed is brought in scope and under control, which is difficult and expensive to manage without technology aid. This is where the use of AI-powered applications that reduce administrative burdens and manual workloads come in.
AI-Powered Privacy Technology Lessens Compliance Headaches
At the forefront of a positive privacy user experience (UX) is the ability of an organization to promptly handle subject rights requests (SRRs). SRRs cover a defined set of rights, where individuals have the power to make requests regarding their data and organizations must respond to them in a defined time frame.
According to the 2019 Gartner Security and Risk Survey, many organizations are not capable of delivering swift and precise answers to the SRRs they receive. Two-thirds of respondents indicated it takes them two or more weeks to respond to a single SRR. Often done manually as well, the average costs of these workflows are roughly $1,400 USD, which pile up over time.
The speed and consistency by which AI-powered tools can help address large volumes of SRRs not only saves an organization excessive spend, but also repairs customer trust, said Mr. Willemsen. With the loss of customers serving as privacy leaders second highest concern, such tools will ensure that their privacy demands are met.
Global Privacy Spending on Compliance Tooling Will Rise to $8 Billion Through 2022
Through 2022, privacy-driven spending on compliance tooling will rise to $8 billion worldwide. Gartner expects privacy spending to impact connected stakeholders purchasing strategies, including those of CIOs, CDOs and CMOs. Todays post-GDPR era demands a wide array of technological capabilities, well beyond the standard Excel sheets of the past, said Mr. Willemsen.
The privacy-driven technology market is still emerging, said Mr. Willemsen. What is certain is that privacy, as a conscious and deliberate discipline, will play a considerable role in how and why vendors develop their products. As AI turbocharges privacy readiness by assisting organizations in areas like SRR management and data discovery, well start to see more AI capabilities offered by service providers.
For more information, visit http://www.gartner.com
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Tesla Is Building Its First European Factory But It Has to Clear a Forest First – Singularity Hub
Posted: at 2:13 am
Tesla is having a banner year, and were not even two months in. After reaching what was an all-time high in December at a value of $393.15 per share, last Wednesday the companys stock closed at more than double that: $917.42 per share.
While its car sales are strong, theyre not the source of Teslas skyrocketing value; people are investing in the company because they see it as the future of electric vehicles. After clearing a legal hurdle last week, Tesla is set for more growth, and in a brand-new market: Europe. Germany, to be specific.
CEO Elon Musk announced plans last November to build a fourth Gigafactory outside Berlin (the first three are in Nevada, New York, and Shanghai). But construction involves cutting down a pine forest the size of 100 soccer fields (not to mention removing buried World War II ammunition), and work was halted after local environmental groups protested. On top of having to cut down thousands of trees, the factory will border a nature reserve, and theres been much concern raised about how the areas water supply and wildlife will be impacted.
A Berlin-Brandenburg court stopped Teslas forest-clearing with an injunction earlier this month, but last Thursday overturned the injunction and granted the company permission to resume activity, finding that the legal requirements for early construction had been met.
The factory will be located in Gruenheide, a small town about 33 kilometers (20 miles) south-east of Berlin. Tesla intends to have the plant completed and fully functional by mid-2021, and will eventually produce up to 500,000 cars a year there. Though its moving forward with land-clearing and other construction preparations, the company technically doesnt have final project approval from German authorities. Tesla has projected that the factory will employ about 12,000 people.
Getting the state governments approval is just one of a few hurdles left to clear, and in fact may be more straightforward than the other tasks awaiting Tesla as it builds this factory.
German environmental laws dictate that construction must not interfere with the breeding period for wildlife, which starts in March; this essentially means that for the project to move forward on its planned timetable, tree-cutting would need to be completed in the next couple weeks.
Speaking of protecting wildlife, Tesla will also have to provide bats living in the forest with alternative spots to hibernate, put up fences to prevent reptiles from entering the area, relocate ant nests without destroying them, and find a way to humanely expel any wolves living in the area.
In a tweet from January 24, Musk emphasized that the factory will absolutely be designed with sustainability and the environment in mind. He added that Tesla will plant three trees for every tree it cuts down in the area.
Home to iconic brands like BMW, Mercedes, Audi, and Volkswagen, German car manufacturing has been disrupted by companies that got an earlier and stronger start in electric vehicle technologyspecifically, Tesla. The companys Model 3 outsold all German competitors in both the US and European markets last year, and Germanys auto industry is now at a 22-year low.
The arrival of Tesla will, in the best-case scenario for German automakers, spur innovation through competition and encourage more private-sector investment. The Germans may not be leaders in electrification, but they certainly have a reputation for high-quality engineering. They would do well to follow in Teslas footsteps and start investing in energy storage technology and research; perhaps this could be the path to a rejuvenated German auto industry and economy.
But first, lets make sure those bats, wolves, lizards, birds, and ants are taken care of.
Image Credit: Artist rendering, Gigafactory. Image courtesy of Tesla
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