tv Witness Cine- Guerillas Al Jazeera July 1, 2024 4:00am-5:01am AST
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the where do you get the 0 enables we to make the other voice is relevant to so that there is mode that unites us then divide the carriage on a certain day. well, the top stories on ours is 0 fronts is far rights has had its best, electrical performance and decades. exit polls show the national body winning the 1st round of the parliamentary elections. it's need the marine. the pen has perched voters to give head policy. an absolute majority in the 2nd round of voting, in a weeks time, they profit or thought, see, those are both. the french people have demonstrated that desire to turn the page off to 7 use of contemptuous and corrosive power. we warmly thanks the virtues and welcome this result. this 1st step towards the choosing. an alternative is
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a mark of confidence which one is remind, obliges us. next sunday, if we are given the absolute majority to reform the country, i will be the prime minister of all french people. i will listen to each one of you and respect, all opposition. i will be open to dialogue and i will keep at heart the interest of the nation and be the prime minister of everyday life. is almost immediately off to the results were announced. protest, supposing the fog lights of bro counting notes and powers that distance interest politicians are urging both just to support the candidates in the strongest position to the feet. follow right. content is in the 2nd round. the 5 minutes to gabriel towel urged the voters to keep the national value away from apartments in the 2nd round the project to see clever. i'll be sure to have somebody. our objective is clear. you have to prevent the national riley from obtaining an absolute majority in the 2nd drum from dominating parliament,
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and therefore from governing the countries with the nefarious planet it has in mind . i say this with all the forces of that the moment, the months of each and every one of our votes has not a single, but it must go to the national and ready in such circumstances. fonts deserves no hesitation. we must never hesitates. at least 43 palestinians have been killed in garza city. more than 110 injured in the past day. israel's minute she has been shutting residential errors in the streets of the neighborhood. israel has also been carrying out as strikes unoccupied. westbank produced one palestinian who was killed in 5 others injured in an attack that hits an apartment in the newest charms come not far from the city of to colorado. 2 of the injured people are in a serious condition and have been taken to hospital ultra orthodox. jewish is rarely is having protesting in west jerusalem against a mandatory military service is
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a free and court ruled anonymously last week. the members of the religious group should be drafted into the ministry. the court said as well as compulsory service supplies to the ultra orthodox like all the citizens. we will not go to the reading of state or been fixed on over there somewhere and they find for like the entire state religious. they are in virus that they are still trying to at least 19 people have been killed in a suicide bombing tags to ne nigeria. female obama is designated devices at
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a wedding. certainly a funeral and a hospital. so far, no group has claimed responsibility. south africa, the preston's so around. the opposed has announced the cabinet and there's always new coalition government. the appointments come off to lens and negotiations, governing african national. congress lost its majority in major elections. it had to form a coalition. governments with the main opposition party, the democratic alliance alone with 8 other parties. how can the barrow has strengthened into a dangerous storm as it approaches the south eastern caribbean? it's urologist say it's the earliest that in that nonsense hurricane is reached. category for strength, the storm is expected to make lun full on monday. but as all the headlines needs continue, so no just the are often i human. stay with this. the
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artificial intelligence is simply non biological intelligence. and intelligence itself is simply the ability to accomplish goals. i'm convinced that it will ultimately be either the best thing ever to happen to humanity or the worst thing ever to happen. we can use it to solve all of today's and tomorrow's graded problems. a cure of diseases, deal with climate change list everybody out of poverty. but we should use exactly the same technology to create a brutal global dictatorship with unprecedented surveillance and any quality and suffering. that's why this is the most important conversation over time.
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the artificial intelligence is everywhere because we now have thinking machines. if you go on social media or online, there's an archer, so intelligence engine that decides what to recommend. if you go on facebook and you're just scrolling through your friends post, there's an artificial intelligence engine that's picking which one to show you 1st and which one to bury. if you try to get insurance, there is an i engine trying to figure out how risky you are. and if you apply for a job, it's quite possible that a i engine looks at the resume, the we are made of data. as i, one of us is made of data in terms of how we behave, how we talk,
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how we love what we do every day. so a computer scientist are developing deep learning al guards. that can learn to identify, classify, and predict patterns listed in massive amounts of data, the rest facing the form of precision surveillance. you could, could, it's, i'm going to sneak and it means that you cannot go and hook up nice. you are always under too much of the o mode. so the other planet today is done by a handful of dig technology companies or by a few large governments. if we look at what it is mostly
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being developed for, i would say it's a killing spying. and brain washing. so i mean, we have military, i, we have a whole surveillance set for others didn't go using as i major governments. and we have an advertising industry, which is our in toward recognizing what ads to try to, to sell to someone. we humans come to a fork in the road. now the ai we have today is very narrow. the holy grail of a research ever since the beginning is to make a guy that can do everything better than us. we basically build a god. it's going to revolutionize life as we know it's it's incredibly important to take a step back and think carefully about this. what sort of society do we want?
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the probably that a on is really going to outcompetes humans in menu menu. it's not on important scene. everything is going to change a new form of life as a nightstand. the when i was a boy, i saw it, how can i maximize my impact? and then it was clear that i have to fill out some things that lines to become
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samantha's and myself sense that i kind of retire. and this amount of thing can for as of self improve and solve all the problems that i cannot solve for main goal. so artificially general intelligence ag on that kind of line to improve the learning algorithm itself. so basically you can long to improve the way it lines and it can also because if we improve the way it lines the way it lands without any limitations except for the basic fundamental limitations of comfortability. one of my favorite, the robots as this one here. we use this robot for our studies of either physically energy, where i'd be trying to teach those robots to teach itself. what
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is the baby doing a baby as curiously in exploring, it's why that's how the lines, how gravity works and how certain things couple and so on. and as a lauren is to ask questions about the world. and as it aligns to answer these questions, it becomes a more and more general problems on. and so i just was just, i was also wanting to ask all kinds of questions. no trust sleeve, is we try to answer the questions given to them by humans. do have to give a either freedom to invent its own time. if you don't do that, it's not going to become very smart. it was the other hand is really hard to predict what they are going to
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feel. the technology is a force of nature. i feel that there is a lot of similarity between technology and biological evolution. the plain god. scientists have been accused of playing god for a while. but there is a real sense in which we are creating something very different from any we've created so far. the
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that was interested in the concept of we have some and relatively early age. some point that good, especially interested in machine learning. what is experience? what is learning? what is thinking? and how does the brain work? these questions are philosophical, but it looks like we can come up with these algorithms. this both do useful things and help us answer these questions. because it's almost like a slide he loves the computer system that can do any job or any task with a human dice. but on the
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yeah, i mean, we definitely think we will be able to create complete control tournaments being split their own goal. and it will be very important, especially as these beings become much smarter than humans. isn't going to be important to me to have these beans is the goals of these meetings be aligned without goals? so if you're trying to do it open and be at the forefront of research and skill user research and you're the initial conditions. so to maximize the chance that the future will be good for humans. the
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now i is a great thing because they haven't sold all the problems that we have today to solve employment, to solve disease equal sol oversee i think you also create new problems. i think that the problem of fake news is going to be a $1000000.00 times worse. cyber attacks will become much more extreme. it will have totally automated events. st cash has the potential to create infinity stable dictatorships, the going to see
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dramatically more intelligent systems 10 or 15 years from now. and i think it's highly likely that those systems will have completely astronomical impact on society. video. humans actually benefit and who will benefit, who you are, not the in 2012, ibm estimated an average person is generating 500 megabytes of digital footprints every single day. imagine that you wanted to back up one day worth of data to mind if he's leaving behind on paper. how tall will be the stock of paper that contains just one day worth of data. this commodities producing is like from
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the earth through the sun 4 times over. in 2025 will be generating $62.00 gigabytes of data per person. per day. the we're leaving ton of digital footprints while going through our lives. they provide the comfortable algorithms, so the fairly good idea about who we are, what we want, what we are doing in my work, i looked at different types of this, the footprint. so i looked at facebook likes, i looked at language, credit card records, web browsing, histories, search records. then each time i found that if you get enough of these data,
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you can accurately predict future behavior and reveal importance intimates traits. this can be used in great ways, but it can also be used to money to like people facebook ease delivering baby information to, to be, and people, or more. if you slightly change the functioning of facebook engine, you can move your opinions and hands the bolts of millions of people. that petition wouldn't be able to figure out which message each one of these or her voters would like. but a computer can see what's political message will be particularly convincing for you
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. ladies and gentlemen, it's my privilege to speak to you today about the power of big data and psychographics in the electoral process. data from cambridge analytic cos secretly harvested the personal information of 50000000 unsuspecting facebook users camera. so i think i mentioned wines are said that their models were based on my work but cameras not. i think it's just one of the hundreds of companies that are using such methods to targets voters. ringback the how it took started was as a democratizing force as a force for good as an ability for humans to interact with each other without
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gatekeepers. there's never been a bigger experiment in communications for the human race. what happens when everybody gets to have their say, you would assume that it would be for the better that there be more democracy. there be more discussion, there be more tolerance. but what's happened is that these systems have been hijacked. we stand for every person in the world's richest companies are all the technology companies, google, apple, microsoft, amazon, facebook. it's staggering how, in, probably, just in years that the entire corporate power structure are basically in the business of trading electronics. these little bits and bytes,
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the are really the new cards, the way that data is monetized is happening all around us, even if it's visible to us. google has every amount of information available. they track people by their gps location. they know exactly what your search history has been. they know your political preferences. your search history alone can tell you everything about an individual from their health problems to their sexual preferences. so google's reach is unlimited. the, so we've seen google and facebook. right, since these large surveillance machines and they're both actually ad brokers. sounds really mundane, but they're high tech at brokers. and the reason they're so profitable is that
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they're using our shuttle regions to process all this data back and then to match you with the advertiser that wants to reach people like you for whatever message. one of the problems with technology is that it's been developed to be addictive. the way these companies design these things is in order to pull you in and engage you, they want to become essentially a slot machine of attention. so you're always paying attention. you're always jacked into the matrix, you're always checking with somebody controls what you read. they also control what you think you get more of what you've seen before and like before, because this gives more traffic and that gives more ads. but it also locks you into
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your echo chamber, and this is work leads to this polarization that we see today about how people can become radicalized by living in the fever swamps of the internet. so is a key moment for the tech giants, how are they not prepared to take responsibility as publishers for what they shared with the world to deploy a powerful posting technology f scale. and if you're talking about google and facebook, you're deploying things that scale of billions. if you're artificial intelligence is pushing polarization, you have global people, potentially the artificial general intelligence ag,
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i imagine you're smartest friend, is a 1000 friends just this once and then run them to 1000 times faster. so it means that in every day, a lot of times they will to 3 years of thinking imagine how much you could do for every day you could do 3 years worth of work, the, even the very 1st stage guys will be dramatically more capable of insurance as humans, we will no longer be economic leaves when nearly any task that we want to hire
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human. if you could just get a computer is going to do it much better and much more cheaply. it's going to be like me. that was the question. the most important technology in the history of the planet. by a huge margin, it's going to the big tricity we're internet combined. in fact, you can say that the whole purpose of human science, the purpose of computer science van, getting this back into bill, this is going to be built. it's going to be in your life. one is going to be want to make a subsidy reach the
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the large screen will be generated by what's in that macintosh. windows 95 development day. today, apple is re inventing. the driverless cars are great. they probably will reduce accidents except alongside with that in the united states, you're going to lose 10000000 jobs. what are you going to do with 10000000 unemployed people? the forecasting, same. down on the dyno at break neck speed. and it looks like the sleeping of the with the we don't simply focus on the politics of the conflict. it's the consequence of war,
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the human suffering definitely the 4th time. it is one of the most serious thoughts of violence. in recent years, we brave bullets involved because we give voice to those demanding freedom the rule of law. and we always include the views from all sides, the israel's war on god. so be coming in forever war across the united states. why are the student protests for palestine being met with military style pressed down?
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why, despite the insist on 0 consequences for israel in its war on gaza, the quizzical look of us politics the bottom line, the for that one carried jocelyn die while the top store is now on alex's era. front says far right says how does best electro performance in decades exit polls show the national valley winning the 1st round of the parliamentary elections is lead that marine. the pen has urged devices to give half party an absolute majority in a 2nd round voting in a week's time. a deposit it does use those on board. so french people have demonstrated their desire to turn the page after 7 years of contemptuous and corrosive power. we warmly thank the voters and welcome this result. the 1st step
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towards choosing an alternative is a mark of confidence which owners and obliges us hills. almost immediately after the results were announced to protest opposing the fog lights, bro, counting notes on paris. if distance, centrist politicians are urging voters to support the candidates in the strongest position to the feet far right content, just in the 2nd round, it hurts my heart hurts. my stomach hurts. i didn't finish my meal. i left right away. i made this, i got a marker and then left and got your straight away because we must fight. we must fight because i had a child 3 months ago. and i really don't want her to live in a world like this was a government empower, does not respect minorities. at least 43 palestinians have been killed in dallas a city. i'm only 110 injured in the past day. is what was minutes for your husband? shutting residential area is in a surgery,
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a neighborhood at least 19 people have been killed in suicide. bomb attacks and ne nigeria, female obama's death connected devices. that's a wedding ceremony. the funeral and the hospital so far, no group is kind of responsibility. so the african president still around the oppose that has announced the cabinet members of his new coalition government. the governing african national congress lost his majority in may's elections, had to form a coalition. governments with the main opposition party, the democratic lots along with 8 other policies. and the 2nd phase of a controversial plan to the poor, to ask on refugees from focused on the set to begin with. an $800000.00 off guns could be expelled. more than 3000000 of gun refugees are still living in focused on almost half undocumented. but as all the headlines and this continue say, oh no, it is here after i human the
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some futuristic technology. this is now a i might help determine where a fire department is built in a community or where a school is built. it might decide whether you get bail or whether you stay in jail . it might decide where the police are going to be. it might decide whether you're going to be under additional police scrutiny. the predictive policing leads at the extreme. so expert saying, show me your baby, and i will tell you whether she is going to be a criminal. now the waking predictive, we're going to then surveil those kids much more closely. and we're
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going to jump on them at the 1st sign of a problem. and that's going to make for more effective policing. it does, but it's going to make for really grim society and it's reinforcing dramatically existing injustices the imagine a world in which networks of cctv cameras, drones surveillance cameras have sophisticated face recognition technologies and are connected to other government surveillance databases. we will have the technology in place to have all of our movements comprehensively tracked and recorded. would that also means is that we will have created a surveillance time machine that will allow comments and powerful corporations to essentially hit rewind on our lives. we might not be under any suspicion now and 5
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years from now. they might want to know more about us and can then recreate grand new orderly, everything we've done. everyone, we've seen everyone we've been around over that entire period. that's an extraordinary amount of power for us to see this to anyone. and it's a world that i think has been difficult for people to imagine that we've already built the architecture to enable that. i've worked with a group of volunteers over the last couple of years to take a look at the innovation in the overall military. and my summary conclusion is that we have fantastic people who are trapped in a very bad system from the department of defense as perspective where it really started to get interested in it. when we started, think about unmanned systems and how robotic and unmanned systems would start to
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change war. the smarter you made the unmanned systems and robots, the more powerful you might be able to make your military. the under secretary defense robert work put together a major memo, known as the algorithmic warfare across functional team, better known as project maven. eric smith gave a number of speeches and media appearances where he said this effort was designed to increase fuel efficiency in the air force to help with the logistics behind closed doors. there was another parallel effort late in 2017. as part of the project maven, google, eric smith's firm, was tapped to secretly work on another part of the project maven. and that was to take the vast volumes of image data vacuums up by drones operating in
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iraq and afghanistan. and to teach an a i to quickly identify targets on the battlefield. when the story was 1st revealed itself, a firestorm within google. you had a number of employees quitting, and protests, others, assigning a petition objecting to this work. you have to really say like, i don't want to be part of this anymore. their company is called defense contractors. and google should just not be one of those companies because people need to trust google for google to work. the ones we develop, what i know is latanya most lethal weapons. in other words, weapons that are not controlled at all. they are genuinely autonomous yvonne. you
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go to get a president who says the hell with international law. we've got these weapons. we're going to do what we want with them. the, we're very close. when you have the hardware already set up. and all you have to do is flip the switch to make it fully autonomous. what is it there that stopping you from doing that? there's something really to be feared for it, machine speed. what if you're a machine and you've run millions and millions of different worth scenarios, and you have a team of drones and you've delegated controlled half of them, and you're collaborating in real time. what happens when that swarm and drones is tasked with engaging a city? how will they take over that city? the answer is, we won't know until it happened the
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. we do not want an ai system to decide what human it would attack. but we're going up against authoritarian competitors. so in my view and authoritarian regime will have less problem delegating authority to a machine to make legal decisions. so how that plays out remains to be seen. the deal is extremely international. china is up and coming and it's starting to rival in the us, europe, in japan, in terms of putting a lot of processing power behind a i and gathering a lot of data to help learn. we have a young generation of chinese researchers now. nobody knows where the next revolution is going to come from.
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the in china, everybody has audi pay and we'd have to pay. so the mode of payments is every way and was that they can do like a lot of analysis to, to know like your like your spending habits. like, like your credit rating. face recognition technology is widely adopted in china in airport, in transportation. so in the future, maybe in just a few months, you don't need paper ticket to bought a train on your face. the, the intercept from force at google is planning to launch a sensor and version of its search engine in china. google search for new markets leaves it to china despite page things, rules on censorship. tell us more about why you felt it was your ethical
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responsibility to resign as you talk about being completed in censorship and oppression and surveillance. there is a chinese venture company that has to be set up for google to operate in china. and the question is, to what degree did they get to control the blacklist and to what degree would they have just unfettered access to surveilling chinese citizens. and the fact that google refuses to respond to human rights organizations on this, i think, should be extremely disturbing to everyone due to my conviction that the sense is fundamental to functioning democracies and forced to resign in order to avoid contributing to or profiting from the origin of protections for dissidence. united nations is currently reporting that between 200001 1000000 weavers of been disappeared into re education camps. and there was a serious argument that google would be complicit. shouldn't want to surveil version of the search in china. a dragon fly is
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a project meant to launch search in china under chinese government regulations, which include censoring sensitive content. basic queries on human rights. information about political representatives is blocked. information about student protests is blocked and, and that's one small part of it. perhaps the deeper concern is the surveillance side of this when i raised the issue with my managers of my colleagues, there was a lot of concern, but everyone just said i don't know anything. and then when there was a meeting, finally there was essentially no addressing the serious concerns associated with it . so then it filed my informal resignation, not just to my manager, but i actually distributed
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a company wide. and that's the letter that i was reading from. a lies elizabeth next while fi it was invented 700000 years ago and it has its pros and cons. people are realized, you can use cloud to keep warm at night and to cook. but they also realize that you can tell the other people with the a file also has this a highlight quality off growing in a large file without for as a human i do. but the advantages outweigh the disadvantages by so much that we are not going to stop. it's about
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the regulation of a i sounds like an attractive idea, but i don't think it's possible. one of the reasons why i had one frank is. so she, you could, you also t off scientists have, don't give a down for regulation, military power was won't give a down for relations. these are, they would say that's we see americans don't with the chinese one of the chinese one say, oh, if we don't do is on the russians with, with no matter what kind of political regulation is outside of all these military industrial complexes. they will almost by definition have to,
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you know, with that because they want to avoid funding different the, well, you know, i don't see if i sure will. she owes you why. sure. this will go through via will pay you to change social good. a. i switch on you to what the program developed by the company open a i can invite co shared incredible stories just like human beings. it's one small step to machine one, giant leap, the machine kind ibm newest artificial intelligence system took on experience human debate is n one, a live device. computer generating videos known as dave specs are being used to put women spaces on corner graphic videos. the artificial intelligence evolves at a very crazy pace. you know, it's like progressing so fast. in some ways, we're only at the beginning, right now. you have so many potential applications as
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a gold mine. since 2012, when deep learning became like a big game changer in the computer vision community, we were one of the 1st to actually adopt deep learning and apply it in the field of computer graphics. a lot of our research is funded by government, military intelligence agencies, the or the way we read these photo real mappings. usually the way places that we need to subjects a source in a target. and i can do a face replacement. the one of the applications is for example, i want them into plates. if someone's facing things that you did not get can be used for creative things for funding contents. but obviously can also be used for just simply manipulate videos. you can generate faint news.
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or one criticism that is frequently raised against my work is saying that even though they were stupid ideas in the past, like phonology of these, you open to me. there were people claiming that you can read a character of a person just based on their face. people would say this is rubbish. we know it was just family veiled racism and superstition but the fact that someone made a claim in the past and try to support this claim with invalid reasoning doesn't automatically involving
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a decline of course, people should have rights for their privacy when it comes to sex orientation or political views, but i'm also afraid that in a kind of technological environment, this is essentially impossible. the people should realize there's no going back. there's no running away from the algorithms. the sooner we accept, they negligible and inconvenient truth that's, privacy is gone. the sooner we can actually start thinking about how to make sure that our societies are ready for the post privacy age. the
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while speaking about patient medical condition and my deep thoughts, i sometimes got to the very dark ad off on his story. one of the people had to live in the system, but some part of the side tables accepted on some part of the society most accused to death. the pope would manila do to have such an is trolanda in a sense the to, to be very quick and efficient for selection
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and best as the apple kind of technicians the, the, the leaves and desires of the 1st aig guys would be extremely important. and so it's important, broken them correctly. i think that if, if this is not done, then the nature of evolution of natural selection favour though systems prioritize them survive on us. it's not that it's going to actively hate humans and want to harm them. but it just is going to be too powerful and i think a good analogy would be the base human street animals exhaust. we hate animals,
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i think terms love animals and have a little infection for them. but when the time comes to build a highway between 2 sittings, you're not asking daniels for permission, which is to do it because it's important for us. and i think by default, that's the kind of relationship it's going to be between us and a g. eyes of each are truly a turning most and operating on the, on behalf all the future is going to be good for the ice regardless. it would be nice if to before humans as well. the
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is the responsibility weighing on my shoulder. that's not a lot of responsibility on the shoulders of the parents of each time the pounds some of them made. but they had no way of predicting what he would do and how we would change the law. and so you can really hold them responsible for that. the . so i'm not a very human centurylink person. i think i'm a little stepping stone and the evolution of the universe to watch from texas
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is also cancer mean that i'm not, it's a crown of creation and that human kind as a whole and is not the crown of creation. but he has settings a stage for something that is bigger than that transcends that will go out in a way where humans cannot follow and tons falls the entire universe. why is easy, reasonable universe so i find beauty and all, and seeing myself as part of this month's grand sam, the,
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one of the most critical things i think is the need for international governance. we have an in balance of power here. that way of corporations with more power might inability than entire countries. how do we make sure that people's voices are getting hurt? it tons the law phrase on an account via rod sprays on we can't embrace all of these wonderful new technologies for the 21st century without trying to bring with us the package of human rights that way for so hard to achieve. and that remains from job the
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hey, i isn't good and it isn't the evil either. it's gonna amplify the desires and goals of whoever controls it. and a nice day is under the control of a very, very small group of people. the most important question that we humans have to ask ourselves at this point in history requires no technical knowledge. is the question of what sort of futures society, what do we want to create with all this technology we're making, what do we want? the role of humans to be in this world, the
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french lawyer, 6, just this for a compact tree. it's sentenced to death in the rock for his alleged involvement. and i, so despite the challenges of his controversial case, he's determined to oppose the principles of compassion, to manage the defending french justice, to witness documentary on a jersey to the
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safe, the mean big summit as an international inside corruption, excellence award, denominator hero. now the, the southern states, the us still hot and they produced one or 2 from the storms as a result of the communities from the gulf. but still the biggest ones, much for the knolls in the midwest from the prairies of central canada. and there are a range of now developing in arizona, new mexico, and across the border and mexico itself, which would be a regular thing now as the season moves on. but maybe the most surprising weather is this a hurricane already this early in the season? that's a ras site, but it's that all the same strength thing too very rapidly. it's also already
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a category 3. i'm moving fairly quickly westwards that alrick and warning science some of the small lives in barbados down through granada, including so lucia. so the vincent in the granite is at the moment it looks like the cost might take it almost directly of the tougher canada last time i had to come in to have the top of this island, it was 2005 as a category too. so we are close to that, it'll go through fairly rapid late on monday and then open open both as great sit. i had a little difficult spin which in central america it's still wet and the full daily funds are still as a mexico this storm itself. current full cost takes it to was the least, but don't worry about that. we will of course, updated as that forecast changes. the policy is in power for prime ministers in 5 years. now polls suggest that votes is
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one person's conservatives out well that you can revise the change on the latest test on that will give what she soon economic jones stay without your 0. the coverage of the u. k. election the a strong, the sharing for thoughts as far right? national routing, in the 1st round of parliamentary elections. exit polls show present becomes a non instead place the bound carrie johnston. this is all just from do also coming in 10 specials between is very soldiers and palestinian fighters, northern kansas to j. e. in naples the series of coordinated suicide attacks in northern nigeria.
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