Miscellaneous


Computing for the people: Ethics and AI

Published on Mar 11, 2019

Melissa Nobles, Kenan Sahin Dean of the MIT School of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences and a professor of Political Science offers an introduction to a session on “Computing for the People: Ethics and AI” at the celebration of the MIT Stephen A. Schwarzman College of Computing. Thomas L. Friedman, foreign affairs columnist at The New York Times and author of Thank You for Being Late, moderates a panel on ethics featuring Ursula Burns, executive chairman and CEO of VEON, Ltd; Ash Carter, director of the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs at the Harvard Kennedy School and former US Secretary of Defense; Jennifer Chayes, technical fellow and managing director of Microsoft Research New England, New York City, and Montreal; Joi Ito, director of the MIT Media Lab; Megan Smith, founder and CEO of shift7 and former US Chief Technology Officer; and Darren Walker, president of the Ford Foundation.

This historic three-day event provided a thoughtful, wide-ranging exploration of the ideas behind the founding of the MIT Schwarzman College of Computing and the frontiers it intends to reach.

The MIT Schwarzman College of Computing, made possible by a $350 million foundational gift from the chairman, CEO, and co-founder of Blackstone, marks the single largest investment in computing and AI by an American academic institution, and it will help position the United States to lead the world in preparing for the rapid evolution of computing and AI.

In fields far beyond engineering and science — from political science and urban studies to anthropology and linguistics — some of today’s most exciting new research is fueled by advanced computational capabilities. The MIT Schwarzman College of Computing will create the next generation of highly trained computational thinkers and doers who can offer the world the cultural, ethical, and historical consciousness to use technology for the common good. (Learn more: https://helloworld.mit.edu/about/)
 

Toward Ethical AI - Kurt Muehmel (Datahiku)

Published on May 14, 2019

AI technologists must consider the ethical implications of what we're building. Kurt Muehmel explores AI within a broader discussion of the ethics of technology, arguing that inclusivity and collaboration is a necessary answer.
 

Do you know AI or AI knows you better? Thinking Ethics of AI

Published on Jun 21, 2019

How is AI changing our world? Why should each of us care about it? What would be our future with AI? Four experts talk about ethical questions of AI such as self-driving cars, job loss, data bias, gender issues, minority populations, human vulnerability, international cooperation and lessons from the Frankenstein story.
 

Webinar | Ethics in AI: Our certain destruction in both the short and long term

Published on Jun 28, 2019

Machine Learning Engineer, Sam Ringer, presented a webinar on Ethics in AI and whether the rise in AI will lead to our certain destruction in both the short and long term.

Over the last few years, the rise in AI has seen a lot of changes in the way humans interact with machines. In this webinar, Sam discussed some common uses of AI, the basic principles of it, and how it is impacting humans. Sam spoke about the power of AI, and how its continued rise is likely to impact humans in years to come.
 

Do you know AI or AI knows you better? Thinking Ethics of AI (version with multilingual subtitles)

Published on Aug 28, 2019

In this version of the video, you can activate subtitles in Chinese, English, French and Japanese.

How is AI changing our world? Why should each of us care about it? What would be our future with AI? Four experts talk about ethical questions of AI such as self-driving cars, job loss, data bias, gender issues, minority populations, human vulnerability, international cooperation and lessons from the Frankenstein story.
 

XR Ethics Manifesto

Nov 5, 2019

This XR Ethical Manifesto was presented by Kent Bye at Greenlight's XR Strategy Conference on Friday, October 18, 2019 in San Francisco, CA. The XR industry needs an ethical framework to navigate moral dilemmas.
 

The AI Dilemma | Sune Hannibal Holm | TEDxCopenhagen

Jan 19, 2020

Should important decisions about citizens be taken on the basis of their statistical profile? Artificial Intelligence is finding its way into public administration. We face the AI Dilemma. Sune’s research focuses on ethical issues arising in the context of artificial intelligence and biotechnology. He is particularly interested in questions concerning bias and fairness in algorithmic decision-making and in the dilemmas that arise when algorithmic decision-making tools are introduced into public administration. He also does research on the use of machine metaphors in the biological sciences and on the ethics of risk.
Sune is associate professor at the Department of Food and Resource Economics at the University of Copenhagen. He holds a Ph.D. in This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community.
 

Artificial Intelligence and regulation: regulatory challenges

Feb 21, 2020

In this video, I talk to Philippe Defraigne, a world-leading regulation expert, about the regulatory challenges around artificial intelligence and machine learning.

If you would like more information on this topic, please feel free to visit my website and sign up for content updates! I write articles every week on various different topics such as Big Data, Artificial Intelligence & Machine Learning.
 
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