Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
443.6K views | +2 today
Follow
Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
Social marketing, PR insight & thought leadership - from The PR Coach
Curated by Jeff Domansky
Your new post is loading...
Your new post is loading...
Scooped by Jeff Domansky
Scoop.it!

Google's Artificial Brain Is Pumping Out Trippy—And Pricey—Art

Google's Artificial Brain Is Pumping Out Trippy—And Pricey—Art | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

ON FRIDAY EVENING, inside an old-movie-house-cum-art-gallery at the heart of San Francisco's Mission district, Google graphics guru Blaise Agüera y Arcas delivered a speech to an audience of about eight hundred geek hipsters.

 

He spoke alongside a series of images projected onto the wall that once held a movie screen, and at one point, he showed off a nearly 500-year-old double portrait by German Renaissance painter Hans Holbein. The portrait includes a strangely distorted image of a human skull, and as Agüera y Arcas explained, it's unlikely that Holbein painted this by hand. He almost certainly used mirrors or lenses to project the image of a skull onto a canvas before tracing its outline. "He was using state-of-the-art technologies," Agüera y Arcas told his audience.

 

Neural networks are not only driving the Google search engine but spitting out art for which some people will pay serious money.His point was that we've been using technology to create art for centuries—that the present isn't all that different from the past. It was his way of introducing the gallery's latest exhibit, in which every work is the product of artificial neural networks—networks of computer hardware and software that approximate the web of neurons in the human brain. Last year, researchers at Google created a new kind of art using neural nets, and this weekend, the tech giant put this machine-generated imagery on display in a two-day exhibit that raised roughly $84,000 for the Gray Area Foundation for the Arts, a San Francisco nonprofit devoted to the confluence of art and tech....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Neural networks are not only driving the Google search engine but creating art for which some people will pay serious money.

No comment yet.
Scooped by Jeff Domansky
Scoop.it!

A Son’s Race to Give His Dying Father Artificial Immortality

A Son’s Race to Give His Dying Father Artificial Immortality | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

The idea pops into my mind almost immediately. For weeks, amid my dad’s barrage of doctor’s appointments, medical tests, and treatments, I keep the notion to myself.


I dream of creating a Dadbot—a chatbot that emulates not a children’s toy but the very real man who is my father. And I have already begun gathering the raw material: those 91,970 words that are destined for my bookshelf....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

The concept of "artificial immortality" is fascinating.

No comment yet.
Scooped by Jeff Domansky
Scoop.it!

Watch Zuckerberg's Jarvis AI make him toast and shoot him a shirt

Watch Zuckerberg's Jarvis AI make him toast and shoot him a shirt | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Mark Zuckerberg announced he was building an AI system for his own home called Jarvis back in January. After a year of coding, he’s ready to show it off.


You can see Jarvis make Mark some toast, teach his daughter Mandarin, and even shoot him some clothes when he’s ready to get dressed (surprise, it’s a plain gray t-shirt).


When Zuckerberg wakes up, Jarvis lets him now about his upcoming calendar events. And when he doesn’t feel like speaking, he can communicate with Jarvis via a Messenger bot as well.


Also, Jarvis sounds a lot like Morgan Freeman – and it might actually be him – so that’s pretty awesome. Just watch the video....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Amazing what you can do with a couple of billion bucks. I mean Morgan Freeman as the voice of his AI Jarvis? Awesome Z!

No comment yet.
Scooped by Jeff Domansky
Scoop.it!

AI Predicts The Future Will Be As Bad As The Past

AI Predicts The Future Will Be As Bad As The Past | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

It’s the age of machine learning, they say. Thanks to algorithms, we can finally eliminate bias. There was no subconscious prejudice -- the decision was made by a computer. After all, computers don’t have a subconscious.

 

Except, of course, they do.We can know what you are likely to do based on what you’ve done before. We can know what is likely to trigger you. We can build models that replicate existing outcomes.

 

But our existing outcomes haven’t always been great. Our world is rife with historical biases and systemic injustices. And when we build machine learning algorithms using historical data, we effectively build these biases and injustices into the model....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

AI bias? You betcha.

No comment yet.
Scooped by Jeff Domansky
Scoop.it!

Why Google Home is spreading a fake story about Barack Obama plotting a coup

Why Google Home is spreading a fake story about Barack Obama plotting a coup | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

When Twitter user Rory Cellan-Jones asked Google Home if Barack Obama is planning a coup, the digital assistant device responded by detailing a bogus conspiracy theory about the former president plotting a communist scheme to take over the government. 

"According to details exposed in Western Centre for Journalism's exclusive video, not only could Obama be in bed with the communist Chinese, but Obama may in fact be planning a communist coup d'état at the end of his term in 2016," the smart home device's robotic voice explained, though it stumbled over the word "d'etat."

But this outlandish response isn't restricted to Google Home. Rather, it highlights a problem with how the search engine responds to queries in the form of "featured snippets" — short, direct answers highlighted at the top of its search results....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

This is a fascinating story and post about search algorithms, fake news and the importance of being earnest in your online research. Highly recommended reading. 9.5/10

No comment yet.