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Dec 20, 2023

Google plans to restrict election-related queries in 2024 on Bard

Posted by in categories: internet, law enforcement, robotics/AI

Google, the internet giant now a subsidiary of Alphabet, announced on Tuesday that it will limit the kinds of queries related to elections that its chatbot Bard and search generative experience can answer ahead of the 2024 U.S. Presidential election.

The company said that the new restrictions will be implemented by early 2024. The company recently made a landmark change to its location data privacy which has made it difficult for law enforcement agencies to access private location data of people near the crime scene and issue geofence warrants.

According to Reuters, the U.S. is not the only country that will witness crucial elections in 2024. India, the world’s largest democracy, and South Africa, among others, will also hold national elections in the same year.

Dec 20, 2023

Scientists discover a framework in the brain for organizing the order of things

Posted by in categories: information science, neuroscience

“I believe we have found one of the brain’s prototypes for building sequences” says Professor Edvard Moser.


Scientists at NTNU’s Kavli Institute for Systems Neuroscience in Norway have discovered a pattern of activity in the brain that serves as a template for building sequential experiences.

Continue reading “Scientists discover a framework in the brain for organizing the order of things” »

Dec 20, 2023

New COVID variant JN.1 is on the rise this holiday season: What symptoms to look out for

Posted by in category: futurism

The JN.1 variant is responsible for roughly one fifth of current COVID infections, estimates the CDC. These are the symptoms to watch for.

Dec 20, 2023

A New Brain-Like Supercomputer Aims to Match the Scale of the Human Brain

Posted by in categories: biological, neuroscience, supercomputing

A supercomputer scheduled to go online in April 2024 will rival the estimated rate of operations in the human brain, according to researchers in Australia. The machine, called DeepSouth, is capable of performing 228 trillion operations per second.

It’s the world’s first supercomputer capable of simulating networks of neurons and synapses (key biological structures that make up our nervous system) at the scale of the human brain.

DeepSouth belongs to an approach known as neuromorphic computing, which aims to mimic the biological processes of the human brain. It will be run from the International Center for Neuromorphic Systems at Western Sydney University.

Dec 20, 2023

Marvin Minsky on AI: The Turing Test is a Joke!

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

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Marvin Minsky is often called the Father of Artificial Intelligence and I have been looking for an opportunity to interview him for years. I was hoping that I will finally get my chance at the GF2045 conference in NY City. Unfortunately, Prof. Minsky had bronchitis and consequently had to speak via video. A week later, though still recovering, Marvin generously gave me a 30 min interview while attending the ISTAS13 Veilance conference in Toronto. I hope that you enjoy this brief but rare opportunity as much as I did!

Dec 20, 2023

UK Supreme Court rules AI is not an inventor

Posted by in categories: law, robotics/AI

The ruling follows a similar decision denying patent registrations naming AI as creators.

The UK Supreme Court ruled that AI cannot get patents, declaring it cannot be named as an inventor of new products because the law considers only humans or companies to be creators.


It follows a similar decision in the US.

Continue reading “UK Supreme Court rules AI is not an inventor” »

Dec 20, 2023

Apple’s immersive next-gen CarPlay will start with Porsche and Aston Martin

Posted by in categories: mobile phones, transportation

2024 vehicles from high-end automakers will get the first taste of Apple’s “cohesive design experience that is the very best of your car and your iPhone.”


FYI, just in case you’re car shopping.

Dec 20, 2023

These minuscule pixels are poised to take augmented reality by storm

Posted by in categories: augmented reality, virtual reality

LEDs and their organic counterparts are getting truly tiny. This could be the moment AR and VR companies have been waiting for.

Dec 20, 2023

Four trends that changed AI in 2023

Posted by in categories: information science, policy, robotics/AI

This story originally appeared in The Algorithm, our weekly newsletter on AI. To get stories like this in your inbox first, sign up here.

This has been one of the craziest years in AI in a long time: endless product launches, boardroom coups, intense policy debates about AI doom, and a race to find the next big thing. But we’ve also seen concrete tools and policies aimed at getting the AI sector to behave more responsibly and hold powerful players accountable. That gives me a lot of hope for the future of AI.

Dec 20, 2023

Google’s Gemini: Challenging OpenAI ChatGPT And Changing The Game

Posted by in categories: innovation, robotics/AI

This week, Google rocked the technology world with the unveiling of Gemini — an artificial intelligence system representing their most significant leap in AI capabilities. Hailed as a potential game-changer across industries, Gemini combines data types like never before to unlock new possibilities in machine learning.

With three distinct versions tailored to different needs, Gemini points to a future powered by AI that can match and even outperform human intelligence. Its multimodal nature builds on yet goes far beyond predecessors like GPT-3.5 and GPT-4 in its ability to understand our complex world dynamically.

As Google sets its sights on real-world deployment, Gemini prompts critical ethical questions around responsibility and safety. If leveraged conscientiously, its potential applications span from mundane productivity tasks to world-changing scientific breakthroughs.

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