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Dec 7, 2018
Distributed, decentralized, and democratized artificial intelligence
Posted by Mike Ruban in categories: business, economics, robotics/AI, singularity
The accelerating investment in artificial intelligence has vast implications for economic and cognitive development globally. However, AI is currently dominated by an oligopoly of centralized mega-corporations, who focus on the interests of their stakeholders. There is a now universal need for AI services by businesses who lack access to capital to develop their own AI services, and independent AI developers lack visibility and a source of revenue. This uneven playing field has a high potential to lead to inequitable circumstances with negative implications for humanity. Furthermore, the potential of AI is hindered by the lack of interoperability standards. The authors herein propose an alternative path for the development of AI: a distributed, decentralized, and democratized market for AIs run on distributed ledger technology. We describe the features and ethical advantages of such a system using SingularityNET, a watershed project being developed by Ben Goertzel and colleagues, as a case study. We argue that decentralizing AI opens the doors for a more equitable development of AI and AGIt will also create the infrastructure for coordinated action between AIs that will significantly facilitate the evolution of AI into true AGI that is both highly capable and beneficial for humanity and beyond.
Dec 7, 2018
Meet the sixth Southeast Asian country to finally have its own space agency
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: space
Dec 7, 2018
China emerges as lead suspect in Marriott data hack
Posted by Michael Lance in categories: cybercrime/malcode, government
Not cool, China.
(Reuters) — Hackers behind a massive breach at hotel group Marriott International left clues suggesting they were working for a Chinese government intelligence gathering operation, according to sources familiar with the matter.
Marriott said last week that a hack that began four years ago had exposed the records of up to 500 million customers in its Starwood hotels reservation system.
Continue reading “China emerges as lead suspect in Marriott data hack” »
Dec 7, 2018
The Most Powerful Ion Drive Ever is About to Blast a Spacecraft to Mercury
Posted by Michael Lance in category: space travel
But it will still take seven years to get there.
The BepiColombo will be travelling a distance of 9 billion kilometers over the next seven years.
Dec 7, 2018
New 2D sensors can cover any smooth surface
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: electronics, materials
But researchers have a new way to keep the materials and their associated circuitry, including electrodes, intact as they’re moved to curved or other smooth surfaces.
The results of their work appear in the journal ACS Nano.
Dec 7, 2018
Connecting The Dots: The Link Between Innovation And Open-Mindedness, With Insights From Science
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: innovation, science
Scientific study looks at how an open minded people think differently and how it influences their information processing. The study found this switch in thinking occurs on a pre-concious level. Read about the link between creativity, innovation and open mindedness.
Dec 7, 2018
A Heart Failure Patient Actually Coughed Up This Blood Clot Shaped Like a Lung Passage
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: biotech/medical, cyborgs
Though it resembles a coral, root system, or some other kind of growth, the above photo actually depicts a six-inch-wide blood clot in the near-perfect form of the right bronchial tree of a human lung, the Atlantic reported on Thursday. Even more uncomfortable is the revelation that it was not removed by medical staff, but in fact coughed up by a patient who was suffering from heart failure.
The photo was released in late November as part of the New England Journal of Medicine’s Images in Clinical Medicine series. University of California at San Francisco doctors Gavitt A. Woodard and Georg M. Wieselthaler wrote that it came from their patient, a 36-year-old man who had long struggled with chronic heart failure. The patient reportedly had a medical history including “heart failure with an ejection fraction of 20%, bioprosthetic aortic-valve replacement for bicuspid aortic stenosis, endovascular stenting of an aortic aneurysm, and placement of a permanent pacemaker for complete heart block.” When the patient was admitted to the hospital’s intensive care unit, they hooked him up to a pump designed to help circulate blood throughout the body:
An Impella ventricular assist device was placed for management of acute heart failure, and a continuous heparin infusion was initiated for systemic anticoagulation. During the next week, the patient had episodes of small-volume hemoptysis, increasing respiratory distress, and increasing use of supplemental oxygen (up to 20 liters delivered through a high-flow nasal cannula). During an extreme bout of coughing, the patient spontaneously expectorated an intact cast of the right bronchial tree.
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