Friday, March 29, 2019

Turing Award Won by 3 Pioneers in Artificial Intelligence

The Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) awarded Yoshua Bengio, Geoffrey Hinton and Yann LeCun the Turing Award that many consider the "Nobel Prize of computing," for the innovations they've made in AI.
The $1 million prize, funded by Google, is named after the British mathematician Alan Turing, who laid the theoretical foundations for computer science.
The three men who won developed Deep Learning with conceptual and engineering foundations for AI by using neural networks for computing. Working independently and together, Hinton, LeCun and Bengio developed conceptual foundations for the field, identified surprising phenomena through experiments, and contributed engineering advances that demonstrated the practical advantages of deep neural networks. Read more here.

Thursday, March 14, 2019

30 Years of the WWW - Infographic timeline


Izaak Crook of the AppInstitute emailed me with an infographic timeline to celebrate 30 years of the world wide web. The infographic is too big for this blog but you can view it at: https://appinstitute.com/history-of-the-web-infographic/

Wednesday, March 6, 2019

LAWS = Lethal Autonomous Weapon Systems

I received an email yesterday asking me to sign the letter below, which I of course did.

To: Rt Hon Winston Peters, Minister for Disarmament and Arms Control
CC: Professor Juliet Gerrard (Chief Scientific Advisor to the Prime Minister)
RE: AN INTERNATIONAL BAN ON AUTONOMOUS WEAPON SYSTEMS

Dear Minister,
We, the undersigned, call on the New Zealand government to take a clear stand against weaponizing AI.
Lethal autonomous weapons systems (LAWS) that remove meaningful human control from determining the legitimacy of targets and applying lethal force sit on the wrong side of a clear moral line. Such weapons, if developed, will permit war to be fought with a merciless fury and blazing speed impossible for humans to survive. The appalling consequence is that machines—not people—will determine who lives
and dies. We oppose such uses of AI.
In particular, as technical experts, we are skeptical of the argument made by the New Zealand delegation at the UN meetings discussing LAWS, that “meaningful human control could be ensured through a human on the loop applied through programming constraints governing target selection and engagement, and an ability to disengage the system if required”. Often, the pace of engagement prevents meaningful human control from
being achieved by providing an “abort” button to a human. This is not just a matter of speed but also of supervision. Human factors research shows that humans struggle to monitor autonomous systems adequately over time. Adding programming constraints on target selection and engagement does not change this.
Therefore, we ask New Zealand to announce its support for a ban on LAWS at the upcoming UN meeting in late March and work to negotiate a treaty instrument that achieves this. New Zealand has a long and proud history of moral leadership in this area, as seen for instance in its strong position against nuclear weapons and its role in the Convention on Cluster Munitions (CCM). We hope the current New Zealand government can add to this proud legacy.