Skip to main content

tv   Dataland  Al Jazeera  December 29, 2022 9:00am-10:00am AST

9:00 am
life think conversation, thanks wanna lebanon is facing a range of crisis. oh, logical economic country. many tarion children are hungry and many people are jobless, while others die at sea. in the midst of the despair, one group is often overlooked. they don't have enough pocket money to buy something to eat. al jazeera goes to the heart of palestinian refugee camps in lebanon to full report stories of a forgotten people on al jazeera. ah, mm. mm. hi, molly, inside into all he had top stories on al jazeera place in cambodia,
9:01 am
say at least 10 people have died and dozens more have been injured in a hotel. fire reports indicate that it broke out on the ground floor. the grand diamond hotel and casino employee pay for spreading quickly. a number if the injured have been taken to hospital neighbor, use highland in c. m. as a journalist in cambodia, capital non pen. he's been tracking developments there were last night about 1130 p m local time. there was the table electronic explosions. and actually, i leased a lot of people on the 18 florida were trapped there. and 2 or 3 people jump from that. i like so you 3 floor or 3rd floor, 4th floor. i'm one of them are 2 of them or die. and the other one is broken, the lake and amps. and apparently the 2 more still trapped in their top floor. and
9:02 am
now the time i military to reach you workers, they are working around the clock to rescue those people. united states has joined a growing list of countries imposing cave at 19 restrictions on people in writing from china. and they've comes just a day on to beijing announced it would draw all quarantine meshes for inbound travelers. the u. s. joins it's li, taiwan, india and japan, which all require negative tests. anyone traveling from china? a white house correspondent kimmy hawk. it has me. well, the vital administration is concerned that the chinese government is not being fully transparent. and this is a concern that goes back to the start of the pandemic. and as such as a result of the ease of the restrictions in recent days in china as well as what the us says or a spike in cases in china. and the u. s. is taking measures to ensure that there isn't a spike of cases of covered 19 in the united states,
9:03 am
particularly when it comes to some variance of the i'm a crime variant. ukraine's military says, russian forces have stepped up more to an artillery type on the city of cason. 33 missiles were fired at civilian targets, some hit a hospital maternity ward virtual global, the charge of live, there were 2 strikes. one was right here. we have covered the crater, the 2nd strike, you can see the consequences. after the attack explosions started, we instantly moved the pregnant women to the basement and then moved them to war. mean was where they spent the night after a checkup. we let them go home at the federal level, there was an abrupt explosion i grabbed went ahead and reached the blanket. anything i could see and quickly ran to the corridor. the windows and glass started to shatter. sobs you've been protesting in northern kosovo with agree to remove rhode barricade starting on thursday. people been demonstrating for almost 3 weeks after a former police officer was detained. subbing president alexander voltage met members
9:04 am
of the cost of a serb community in append to ease tensions to was not to the to will suit room from the morning hours. the removal of the barricades will begin. this is not a simple process and can be done in 2 hours as some have imagined. within 24 to 48 hours, the barricades will be removed, but distrust is not removed. those who are playing with the very existence of serbs and kosovo must know that we will not allow it not now nor in the future. we missed several western states and us saw battling major flooding. days after severe winter storms struck, most parts of north america, california, oregon, and washington state have also been effected as well as incoming coalition. government is promising to prioritize expansion of illegal settlements in the occupant. westbank benjamin netanyahu liquid policy release. the statements saying that jewish people have, quote, non questionable, exclusive rights,
9:05 am
all of israel's land. the vatican says that the health of the former po benedict is worsening, and that he's receiving constant medical care. 95 year old became the 1st pontiff in 600 years to resign. when he step down in 2030, and living in the vatican since then those he had lives. nice, continues he, on al jazeera, after data land ah, ah right now, at this very low mit, artificial intelligence is trying to figure out exactly who you are. a,
9:06 am
i mimics our thoughts and emotions. it analyzes ourselves to decode our genetic material. no task is beyond its capabilities a i is even learning to drive our cars for us. ah, a i controls robots that work more efficiently than we do. so where does this leave us in this new world of artificial mines? in the last 10 years, we have developed an inseparable bond with our cellphones. smartphone capabilities are bolstered by artificial intelligence, which serves our needs whilst keeping a watchful eye. network operators record our movements to the nearest meter,
9:07 am
as some applications, geo tag users, every 60 seconds surveillance cameras, scrutinize our every move unknown entities siphoned our data from public. why fi networks? sensors in the roads, we drive on record our journeys. ah, ah, a i regulates traffic, predicts the weather, and records pollution levels. our frenzied online activity generates an avalanche of data. each minute we make a 3300000 posts on facebook. 3.8000000 searches through google, and send 29000000. what's up messages? these torrents of data are stored in banks of servers all over the world. in the
9:08 am
are of big data, your digital footprint is worth more by the day i flew in paris, 15000 participants and spent thousands of euros to tend to trade show on big data. events like these are big business and you don't want to be the one missing out modern a i systems that by colossal data sets are opening doors to lucrative opportunities . machine learning revolutionized a i development that is machines capable of teaching themselves without human input
9:09 am
. over the last 5 years, this technology has transformed a i research. these algorithms are able to instantly identify objects placed in front of a camera, but this ability to recognize as many potential applications a purse based startup has developed new facial coding technology. ready this algorithm is capable of reading facial expressions which are so nuanced, they may pass unnoticed to the human eye. the end point is commercial reactions are measured against different adverts to see which images are the most effective level does renew those, which is it. that is the only chill director on his. him was to get 20 posts on the shows can zap back to those you johnny. ne, predict political shall look knows. i go here for 11,
9:10 am
shall talk to you said bam. made a stocky to set a ha master, took a horse, salt lake will smite us so gone past, gone and talk with you and get hold on the piece. so he said, and then a little more to count to scroll. you can call to sit in with him as well. i shook his epo. i couldn't let his this really repeat. so what i don't on cook on them was show on twice i came in the system, so i don't less valid williamson and watch altitude. don't judge montague, a sample sunk as he fall in well presented the yard, the kiss, marched his camacho, but good the tuscan. fair said dumb. it was your clinical future personal little it could be push or could you also know this algorithm is not limited to commercial application. you can also measure people's reactions to politicians. it was tested in the last french presidential election cycle during a televised debate with,
9:11 am
if you could, you little go sit lentil, north vinegar tub. no one vermont, no clue deeper to teach a vague the new movie does have a good new rules. use ash, pasco, jacob, shows them a copy. it has a fish euclidean, a pretty dot, if he collated upon the deck, you should never to presume was you may not shall. look on the deck, you never to presume was all negative lineup in a pre a look on the dow, thus a bush, joe. crazy. no sankey, on guess you abuses hitting michael a don't glue but didn't when mass on the ticket, but he don't. if he just he turned also to make such an algorithm effective, it must be fed millions of data points. the gods of the mega data world are the big for google, amazon. facebook and apple. did we headed desert to see it in action?
9:12 am
here? google has built it. largest research center dedicated a i outside of us with 2000 contributors hailing from all over the world. google has always been excited about artificial intelligence and the use of mushing learning has increased rapidly in their recent years. and it makes possible what was impossible. just 2 years ago, a machine to learning in a different way from humans. they need to see a lot of examples to understand what they're seeing on the, for the graph. for example, if you are teaching a computer to recognize a captains that you much, you need to show it's a lot of examples and then the system would try to take a guess of was a new pictures. and every time it would make a mistake, for example, miss label a dog for a cat, it with the just the barometers
9:13 am
a tiny bit. and then after seeing and probably a 1000000 of examples, the system food. so learn to differentiate between cats and dogs as well as people do when is my next making? the next thing on your calendar is today at 1 pm. it's called context. b shard bees. audi leads a teen developing a next gen voice command assistant, a project very much in keeping with the ambitions of big tech companies. thanks to progress made with image and voice recognition. the assistant can answer any questions a user could ask. who painted this? mona lisa was created by leonardo da vinci translate this this might be right. check out the translation in the image above.
9:14 am
how many calories doesn't have. there are 95 calories in one medium, apple. this virtual assistant slips into the heart of your home as a smart speaker justice and gets better, the more you use it. it both learns from the interaction to more personalized towards my needs. but also i can teach things for the assistant. for example, i can just say ok, google, my favorite team is brussel owner. okay, i'll remember that you said my favorite team is bar slona and now just systems remembers this. and then from now on i can simply say my team one is my team next day or things like that. people do not need to learn how to interact with machines . they can just say it, you know, you can just say, hey, google or the taxi for me. it makes the services and benefits really to be
9:15 am
available to all people. okay. google has a traffic to my home on your way home traffic as late as usual. it is 28 minutes by car. okay, you will remind me to call mom when i get home. sure. i'll remind you on your phone when you get home. when that works out there really at the human level, at the same way that humans interact between themselves, then, then these types of technologies is available to everybody. i have an optimistic view on the future, and i believe there's a tremendous opportunity in artificial intelligence. we are still in the early days of the field, but we've seen that it can tackle some of the largest problems in the world. the technology has an ability to find patterns in complex data sets that humans could never do alone. so this has huge implications and the technology has an opportunity
9:16 am
to help researchers in different fields to tackle some of the most difficult problems on the field of medicine, transportation, astronomy and elsewhere from health care to transport, to the stars. the applications for this technology scene limit list to find more concrete applications. we had to a so called smart town. on the way we noticed airports increasing reliance on a i systems to manage the flow. passengers cleaned themselves will soon integrate a i system to monitor whether pattern with altitude and fuel levels in real time to adjust the flight path. managing the daily rhythm of life is a growing problem for urban centers. dublin, ireland is proud to declare itself a smart city,
9:17 am
having that heavily on an investment in a i, systems for logistics. the old doc lands are now the smart doc lands, a model for future urban development. we are at the silicon valley of europe in dublin. you just look at the dock vans here, you know, some people call it the silicon docs. we've got, we're a leading tech companies, you know, within 15 minute walk. you've got google with 6000 employees. you got facebook, you've got air b and b all creating excellent value for the city and building great partnerships and relationships on our smart city program as well. there's lots of big trends, like big data, internet of things, machine learning, artificial intelligence. what you really need to do is take that data back, you know, crace insights from that data and in almost real time make decisions based on our data. and we're seeing it across, i suppose, mobility and transport across waste, across emergency responses. and i think, you know,
9:18 am
the true smart city is the city that actually can acts on the data, make better decisions and create better outcomes at the right time for it. citizens, son, applications are quaint, like this mart been that notifies the local services that it needs to be empty for other uses are aimed at more complex problems like managing the flow of traffic in a town experiencing and economic search. the council has installed cameras and sensors across a number of key locations. they record the flow of pedestrians, bikes, buses, and car. ah, but how did they manage this huge flow of data? brendan o'brien rent the team responsible for traffic light operation, many towns, he's a similar system, but here adjustments are made in real time based on the flow of traffic. every bus
9:19 am
is equipped with sensors every 20 seconds, every single boss reports to us where it is, what it's doing, what route is it on? is it in congestion? is it stopped at a bus stop? will see the slowdown and boost movements and that will actually alert or operators here to the fact that those problems which the bosses are experiencing. but that in turn means that all the traffic is experiencing as well. i. so what so hutton this morning, it looks a bit sir. congest, they're in a free vacation. yeah, the date is shown as actually is congestion here this morning to, to delays on this route here. so it should be coming to view as little time through here that that's a fairly long askew at the moment is not an act is building up quite severe. our system is, is the south learning south calibrating system. most of the time the tim works away in the background by itself and an automated voice. the system still requires some human input to manage effectively. but there is another great technological leap forward on the horizon. a piece of software that will predict problems before they
9:20 am
arrive. can we predict what's gonna happen next? you see all these vehicles coming in, you know, can we go forward the next half an hour and say, oh, i think here will be congested here will be congestion unless we take some action. that's kind of using all that information and using multiple data sources to really find a pattern. and once they find a pattern, they can then see what to do. next. the city authorities are sitting on an enormous pile of data, but they don't have the means to fully utilize it. they have therefore joined in partnership with ibm, which opened a research station just outside the city in 2011. ah, once that investment is made, then you can do things like sensor rising entire road networks and actually of collecting that data. and then once you have it, then you can actually start applying artificial intelligence to that data to make predictions,
9:21 am
to make suggestions as well. data scientists are the backbone of a i development. they are constantly refining and analyzing a huge range of inputs to find hidden correlations amongst data from a me, in just a lot of data from various services. the main challenge is that the data are very heterogeneous. each tells you a small part of the complete picture in it's very hard for us to actually know what has happened. so we may be able to detect that this road is blocked. but the precise reason why that road is blocked is often obscure. often the solution lies in adding a new source of data. ibm has begun integrating posts made on twitter to its algorithms data feed. the twitter often allows you to associate g o text tweets
9:22 am
about an event such as, there was an, a concert, and 70000 people are leaving this, arizona, i with the information that the, this whole here he, hey seeing might slower travel times than usual. so sort of in order to provide the explanations the twitter is very use a lot of artificial intelligence. now, i think is comes down to making predictions, saying this is going to happen. and then leaving it to the person to decide what to do about that. as we go forward, we'll see a lot more solutions as opposed to just predictions. many developers are hard at work creating programs that leverage predictive technology, making some video streams. that's okay. yeah, well this came is working on and only i, assistant for drivers side connection,
9:23 am
video streams lives. so you have load the event detection in the video stream, right? yes. so we have something i could use for the companion, or what we want to provide to you is an assistant that gives information that's relevant to you in the context of the strip, right? so the idea is essentially a companion that watches over you like a guardian angel that sees all your behaviors because this only some advice that's relevant for you. it just detected something. it seems you're going to use a t l field. is that correct? that he's got to yes, you should enter you cd 3, the noise code still oregon road. is that okay? can you explain to me why? because the you see the internal gates are closed. now can i suggest the best
9:24 am
parking spot to you? that would be great. yes. the assistant can into it what the user needs without having to ask a direct question. is they are coming from the car and from the driver. like where the car has been, what trips i've taken in the past? where am i headed? no, but also a lot of data from the environment, right? like traffic situation only if the weather situation. now, we may be even data from social media or the publicly available data. what's the camera in front of it? so with this camera fluid be able to detect certain conditions of the driver and include these conditions, you know what a i model and expand our risk mitigation strategies. so as to really include the cognitive state of the driver. so if you can detect that somebody has a lot on his or her mind, writes them companion may use that information to be more proactive. that situation
9:25 am
where somebody is really focused and not distracted with hey, i want to be your best friend, a friend that reads your emotions, counsels you guides you and follows you. it seeks omnipotence. but whether this will be for better or for worse, remains to be seen as we had north in search of the cutting edge of digitally enhanced medicine. cindy and was an early adopter of data driven health care a i, it's becoming a key asset in providing treatment. helsinki general hospital, the largest in finland, is developing an algorithm to efficiently process patients. marcus
9:26 am
less cannon was an early advocate of such research. li, his unit deals with premature births that weigh less than one and a half kilos whose lives lie in the balance o the phone. mm. we're moving, we have collected data for several years actually over the decades we monitor day, the hot trades are using rate oxygen. so to raise on blood research laboratory values, we are trying to develop algorithms that could detect a different diseases on the same model. we have so far used sepsis. oh no, it's looking like that. those who are valid by the immune system of premature babies is very weak. they are particularly at risk of contracting septicemia. this
9:27 am
infection can have serious repercussions on mental development and can lead to cognitive impairment in 10 percent of cases, it can even prove fatal in the beginning to comp you the needs to know whether the space and have the septa so not. so basically we are telling them that, okay, these patients had said this, these patients didn't have us epsis and asking compute defined, but differentiates these 2 groups. and then the computers trying to find the rules . so the machine is in a way, learning by itself to detect sepsis are getting the same you what we're hoping to do with matching learning is to get the tool that would give the same kind of i that them experienced. dr. hass that tell also less experience doctors that okay, now you should perhaps be worried about this baby. and actually in this project we were able to detect steps as 24 hours before dr. had system high suspicion that though we took up a block of blood samples that confirmed the diagnosis. this advance detection
9:28 am
system allows treatment to begin 24 hours earlier in a situation where time is of the essence. data accumulated throughout a patient lifetime is what forms big data in finland for the last 20 years. this information has been stored in a centralized server. helsinki is general hospital, wants to deploy a i to get the most out of this data and has launched some 30 pilot schemes. we collect all the information from the patient from their electronical health records, from their imagine pictures from their laboratory. this, the amount of data nowadays is so huge that there are no man can handle that. so we need some help for that. artificial intelligence would no my life for not only for he says, but also for the doctors. and it would be
9:29 am
a tool for hospital directors and nursing stuff. so now it is time to use it. if you see anything as health care becomes ever more technologically sophisticated, the ambitious goal of predictive treatment moves closer to becoming a reality. the wind blows the fishing boat, so as it has for the countless centuries, people have lived here. these are malagasy migrants. they move from the drought written south in such a means to survive. and their story is the interface between climate change and biodiversity laws. the arrival of the migrants is adding to the precious on fish, dogs, unmarried by diversity, already stretched by over fishing. and this is going to happen all over the world, is impacts like sea level rise goals, people to move further and further in land,
9:30 am
putting more pressure on environmental resources for people fleeing the impacts of global warming. it's survival at all costs ah. with blue i moline side indo here,
9:31 am
top stories on al jazeera police in cambodia say that at least 10 people have died and dozens more have been injured in a hotel. fire reports indicate that a burn count on the ground floor, the grand diamond hotel, and casino in point pay before spreading quickly. a number of injured have been taken to hospital and neighboring thailand. in c o. m is a journalist in non pen, he has more in the place. there were last night about 1130 p. m. local time. there was the cable or electronic explosions and actually a lease, a lot of people on the $810.00 florida were trapped there. and 2 or 3 people that jump from that i like so you 3 floor or 3rd floor, 1st floor. and one of them are 2 of them are di and the other one is broken, the legs and arms. and apparently the 2 more still trapped in there. her floor. and
9:32 am
now the ties i military to rich, you workers. they are working around the clock to rescue those people. the u. s. has joined a growing list of countries imposing coven 19 restrictions on people arriving from china. let me come just a day on to a beijing announced it would drop off quarantine meshes, inbound trial of travelers. the u. s. joins it's lee taiwan, india in japan, which over kwan negative tests, anyone traveling from china. ukraine's military says russian forces have stepped up more to an artillery attacks in the city of cason. that he, 3 missiles were fired at civilian targets over the last day. some hit a hospital maternity ward subs you've been protesting, enrolled and kosovo. have agreed to remove road barricades starting on thursday. people have been demonstrating for almost 3 weeks after former police officer was detained. israel's incoming coalition government is promising to prioritize the
9:33 am
expansion of illegal settlements. neil occupied westbank entropy. netanyahu's liquid party released a list of his priorities. says the jewish people have, quote, an unquestionable exclusive right to all of israel's land. those you headlines. nice, continue. hey, on al jazeera, off to data, land are they protect his old profit is a free speech mosque is showing us how vulnerable spaces online truly are when they are controlled by a millionaires of logo, documenting facts on the ground. i'm not a journalist, people trust individuals, more than the news or a purveyor of the state line. how can you show the destruction of a political war and still be a political unchecked? the media can bestowed narratives and reshape realities. the listening post keeps watch on al jazeera ah,
9:34 am
in the last 10 years we have developed an inseparable bond with our cellphones. smartphone capabilities are bolstered by artificial intelligence, which serves our needs whilst keeping a watchful eye. unknown entities safe in our data from public wifi networks. our frenzied online activity generates an avalanche of data. and these torrance of data are stored in banks of servers all over the world. in the era of big data, your digital footprint is worth more by the day ah welcome to sions. in 90 percent of consumer electronics sold worldwide are produced
9:35 am
in this city. smartphones, tablets, and video game consoles are all manufactured by the bucket load. all of us take giants produce their goods. here in this colossal workshop, boutique electronics are symbol than packaged alongside their bargain basement. imitators. the city center posts a gigantic electron next bizarre, which offers such a huge selection of goods that this group of visiting swift students don't even know where to begin. so glad to go to little bit. you see those is ready to go most on what i to to do. so that was all because they were gone. elmer share still da da da. give you much of a free me or should that a 3 to, to proceed with a 3 barbara for just a washer and a bond one. these students are studying electronics design or project management for them. sions, and is proving a bigger draw than silicon valley. back in switzerland, they worked on developing
9:36 am
a number of projects in gen, then they worked on adapting them to the realities of the chinese market. you know, to reconnect this, you know, finish kia, poorer, gonna kill is all for alpha honecliff almost one day it'll fall away. it's going to points you special to a some p sheer to put to see books when watch alpha hebrews to sound like there is sheila, perhaps you don't you see low heat mini booklet rocket washer semester. so mostly fell into his room without even available song to read for santa monica has have leaky. here they work in a maker space, a start up style, digitally focused workspace. a i, technology is their bread and butter. this engineer has come from jordan to market . his invention, weight of pocket spectrometer. we opened the application on the fire. we've scanned some food on how to pierce song to make it real. yeah,
9:37 am
i can eat it. so i just like want it to the device like this. uh huh. and here are your kids eyes wide from information about tomato so you can see how much garb brought in on 5 or inside this tomato and almost wanting. what is the freshness for this? so that's why it's very useful for b bush it's. it's like the same algorithm used by china to identify faces by getting one face to face is i own, or 1000000 or 2000000. so that's how we use deep learning. and a i that's fixed on that he says, ah, in china, it's all about economies of scale. with 1400000000 inhabitants over half of which have smartphones. china is the home of big data.
9:38 am
the whole country is investing in artificial intelligence. china is no longer satisfied with imitating its competitors. it is looking to take on the u. s. for 1st place in the race for global technological supremacy. with a balance sheet worth $40000000000.00. the ali baba group is an online retail giant dubbed the chinese m. o. o o o, o baba is investing $15000000000.00 in research facilities in china, but also in the us, russia and israel. it is very important for the company to invest and without technology, we saw the ai, artificial intelligence i use going to be difficult for the company. and not only for i'd up, i assume for many, many companies. so this why we invest
9:39 am
a lot to help customers to improve the experiences. like the look of this dress with one click, ali baba offers a myriad of similar options. it takes mere seconds to review millions of items listed on its website. so basically you to technology, to hand, to recognize what is in the picture and know where to put that is we know where to put our e s and dinner and dang, extract features. and then we compare a with or to part of the we have didn't send back ah, the same or similar product to our customers. the chinese are now even more dependent on their smartphones than western countries . a host of vital services are centralized within a few online platforms. like the widely popular we chat,
9:40 am
which posts 1000000000 monthly users wish in a ha shenadra joshua had spoken in june. i said, ya bought a google a coolant on the walk and boiled hire with i we soon gotten oh, which and her pension how to you? hello, she go on the moon. certain she are kinda old harp. it's your case. yeah. and both condo, those he georgia, when she local no, and you, he shall sell you. why? hello to maryland. how your your our summer toys i saw your hunting shower. oh twitter. i've been down my don't. yeah. for sure. i'll photoshoot toyota. so july jeans. if war oh i sure would you leo law are you it's i shall you do me the phone? genuine guar tonight is younger. if she'd been with us as a unifying fund. yeah. so to the hockey services on some wooden ball,
9:41 am
do i show you how can we shall what she share with us and she are your what's your time talking to your team? we are from an american, with united for partition. she hiding out to her to dollar was going to be paying i should your aunt, i know. so for walks, we're through the usual web consumers can't get enough and shall little concerned for their own privacy. all the better for ambitious corporations who strive to understand and adapt to consumer behavior. this firm is specialized in processing data from smartphones. the numbers are dizzying. $731000000.00 users are scanned every month. whole towns are put under the microscope. this is har, been home to 10000000 people. this graphic shows the flow of computers block by
9:42 am
block. but data collected from smartphones can tell us so much more about an individual's behavioral patterns because there are sense update on the device. and so it can cause what i do know, maybe they are running, maybe they are walking like example leave the location using the shock. and so when they come in for the shopping and if you in the, in the park. so maybe they are relaxing. it's often priority, and it may be businessman, so we use data to do something different based on that. they are collected profiling in this way, greatly enhances the potential for targeted advertising. but it doesn't stop there because i'm a young man with the biggest thoughts for the company in china. if they want to look over your thought zone car. so they can circle our area and based on what they
9:43 am
thought we collected, we can see if the use of come to the area can match the current use of if the 2 groups of people are similar, maybe i thought who plays told us all the amount of data transmitted by cell phones is constantly on the rise, thanks to an ever increasing number of apps. ant financial is a subsidiary of retail giant alibaba. the company has developed software that assesses damages after a car accident. the app finds and assesses the damages in the blink of an eye. the new report is sent to your ensure with the click of a button. the app also calculates how the claim will affect your premiums. then it
9:44 am
selects local garages to carry out the repairs. it saves the customer time while saving the ensure money since the app can detect inconsistencies and flag potentially fraudulent claims. normally that will be lack chantelle, cranky presents operational cause that is caused the pfizer fraud case. so one through and way solve this for case problem. the usual company can save like cancel, millions chinese throughout each year. the algorithms being developed by ant financial can also offer fast and convenient credit services. this scooter vendor has just taken out a loan to renovate his storefront and purchase mr. ah, the chang who you talked with vendor to e. ha, ha ha ha ha. how are you, sean? good, or to know john buddha change,
9:45 am
you know city williams half tonight you can be fine with the year hutchins, i read they wore now. oh cheer. and those ohio thought she balance, you tours you the thumb botch in 2. now good to push ya. did you? what did you do here? in a few moments, the app evaluates his profile and accepts his application. don't worry about where to get zuba. oh gosh. and they will not, i wasn't, that was a shame, rigidity, an hour the she just you or james hall are they where j goes over this with your record she right now of the little wrench ye yourself, where i can see in for lord, i mean article i play my little boy. this app is aimed at the millions of chinese who live without a bank account by offering them a chance to borrow on credit. behind
9:46 am
this express financial services system lies a complex match of algorithms. it scans all given data on a client to build a predictive model that evaluates the liquidity of any given. startup entrepreneur, italy, nail woman. do you hear the tv feel you fit on for the other? equal to william was true. so you for the why. so i do feel 100 eager now, so i'll show you who the leash edition where i all you see here. oh, whom? who it interesting linda financial challenge is and see for me she's how do you hi shavani sheila, that is it. you can go down, there you go through the you see see hail, be cheated, equal to don't realty a war on and the only $84.00 degrees you see fit on foot either you could, you could always job. she knew lally hall,
9:47 am
who all neil take assume folder and pull the high sal um to clea, a pin. good heart. you cheated from here. ah, these kinds of systems exist also in every day payment apps, such as ali pay these algorithms not only measure your ability to pay back money borrowed, but also integrate your consumer habits into their ratings. sure. what high on the go to my highway, mega yamaha, how we can you chickamauga, she'll or do wild. ha, ha, ha, ha, bail hardaway tune jain assumed which you way away to her time ago. she was wanting assumed she's your technology, shear or jr. tango tango and either you she alicia somewhere, lapse in again year to have humana when you the soon see fair job. little in to get her k shall were talk hamburger soon. she found jewel creighton, what do it's even larger you go learning shuttle she yeah. till you go to harder
9:48 am
sheet. this app allows you to judge others based on their credit score. a once private piece of information turned to public. a new social evaluation tool. many companies are developing such algorithms which assess citizens on opaque criteria. a development roundly denounced by this economics professor in beijing. if you're got a wendy law school, let me say you are a b. i could croup from many services, many internet business, and even delux or life yoyo big, clued from many opposed to p. denise option days and also he went, it's hard for you. ah, a daily laugh because sometimes he said, if for some people sink or you are not scott high lankin system, they sink a,
9:49 am
you are not a good a friend or so you some dating website. they also can shoe your, i see them accredited school to the people and hopefully saw where a lot of scholarly we are sinker. you're not on the label, they're under field tant, we see you finance apps aren't the only ones scanning personal data. public life is under constant scrutiny by video surveillance. china is home to 200000000 security cameras, often equipped with facial recognition technology. this intersection and jensen is one example of its application of ha, ha, ha ha,
9:50 am
ha. schools with tv. sotheby's jacqueline log. well no my lunch with a did o e l. a bela finance. fairly hook on his own. i mean you, it's dan williams. lou. suggestion most you're to just the golden buzz, didn't it always, golden. this installation is a tool for social control. as soon as a pedestrian crosses on a red light, the camera picks up their image and searches the state's databases for an id match . in a matter of seconds, the name and photo of the offender is displayed for all to see on a giant screen shot. facial recognition technology relies on a massive data collected by the authorities on each citizen. ah, the transition to the digital age has been
9:51 am
a gold mine for developing algorithms that work alongside smart cameras as the state partners with the private sector. the chinese government owns a lot of big data faces, for example, with a personal data us. so they would love to be involved in to these big developments over a i by offering those speak theater to work was start off slick os. hm. so this is a systems that we developed for sports the for the police department. we have a camera in the glass to fund people in the crowd. so if you are in the database, for example, you are foot it eaves or me, seeing people like missing children. if you show up that machine will
9:52 am
shake. what remind you that you found the people in the database? oh, none of them are some dinner that cameras can also be taught to analyze a person's movement patterns, allowing them to identify suspicious body language. like daughter. so it you laid out. i doubled the soothing. wow. oh, the public area and the system were understand some certain patterns. for example, people start to run or people start to fight and the camera will and the sound can work together. the vision and the sound can work together. if this system figure out the tact i need special son for his own po, gunshot, or people yelling for help, then the system will automatically turn the camera into that direction of the song
9:53 am
so that the system will know what is the accident or incident. i don't know whether you heard that they don't either law, the whole city or the system were become like a good in the game. whatever you do, you are recorded and the system understands what you're doing. so in the future, the city we're understand, the people's behavior. if any crime happens, it's worldly, stopped in the real time, rather than afterwards. total digital surveillance is no longer a hypothetical. relegated to the pages of science fiction thrillers. the chinese government has announced the implementation of a so called social credit for 2020 each and every citizen will receive
9:54 am
a score based on data derived from their behavior and habits. to find out more, we spoke to a rare dissenting voice. this renowned historian resigned 20 years ago from the social sciences academy. oh, that's hands the eyes here while government does chicago, while fi, sill acidity. does she go show it to you? if i thought, wow whoa, what the and the good was in the way she had home fade. da, kyla, it's i t o well, the vase and her pin. yeah. they're good chem hill. yeah, dog. ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, good. on the profound bit with oh was since i show cause i had to go ard on his shower. sure. are you to all possible they don't drop i assure no one
9:55 am
that says i cannot assure he's your boss. so the hardening pow orders, you can call the shunting. elaine tomba, one to include torsh i santo, true though of the shims of social credit will integrate your online behavior and social media presence. if your friends, the sites you visit or the content you share are deemed nonconformist, your score will decrease. allow your score to fall too low and you could be denied rental accommodation, a bank loan, or a job interview. even long distance travel will be curtailed. 2 toppa j i you good to go valencia and always ship to gun yoshi. you wouldn't either and then send me a shit hole light. oh, what quick walk gall lie. jim jim cole sawyer. other. why? why is shayrenda? ha chicka?
9:56 am
she'll don't say oh, ga rogan. yet he put on shallow for its yellow. what any pull now she oh, she on ter, for la gun nigel, a shoes and a shovel law. watch him by jo fool saw colder on to the che dia. sure. ah, good ja. copa tissue. sad mayo g that's usually there shall cause i may made some a coma for trying to hold on lights. yeah. g r g a warranty? i mean, sol tomlins jojo way. joe ford. cerio charlie. uh huh. are tom and so sure you kind of was whole said joe lauren's i you wow, hunter charlotte, to ensure gordon that charlie chum would shalysea drug or the law by she'll hi vitale, mamma. is it ignorance or indifference that has kept many chinese in the dark regarding this sinister new development in state surveillance?
9:57 am
either way, one can't help a sense of foreboding when confronted by the full spectrum of potential in mankind's ambition is for the future of big data. as 2022 jewels to glue. we reflect on the major stories, the j. towell julie now to 0 for a series of in depth reports. looking back at this year and ahead to 2022 blue hello. there was seen some very wet weather effect, parts of the middle east with torrential rain affecting some of the gulf states and causing flooding in places like you wait. now it does dry up as we go into thursday
9:58 am
. a little bit foggy in the morning as the moisture is still there for parts, saudi arabia, we will see the cloud as well. starting to pull in and develop across areas like the red sea is going to be more wet weather to come. you can see it developing now, stretching across bringing cloud into guitar. we could still see some rain here as we go into the weekend. but it really is the shamar. that student shows some pretty gusty winds, blowing down over the next few days, knocking some temperatures down as well. that where to weather in places like re add 30 degrees on friday. that was a move across to north africa. so when windy picture, thanks to a disturbance for the canary islands, but if a wind problem blowing into mauritania as well as the western sahara, we are like, you see some showers here much dryer. however, further south of this, it's really down south across angola, pulling into mozambique that we are seen as rash of intense storms and wet or weather, where to weather as well will affect eastern areas of south africa was in pretty
9:59 am
intense thunderstorms, likely enlisted to on thursday ah, a journey both dog perceive uniform. there's a very forever, there's a lot of corruption and a beautiful lake, a beautiful lady. you have to be very patient and already so. so say as a somebody cuz i was in charge of sure. when my father and my mother were arching for king for the personal story to discover the source of one of the most expensive commodities sent from heaven on al jazeera african narrative from african perspectives embark on m albany about a new series of short documentaries, by african filmmakers from nigeria, south africa, and cameron rule you out, your buy property, corporate space,
10:00 am
and turn it into a ford forest. as stone prussia song, gorilla garden, and modern peanuts of camera, africa, direct, on how jessia. when the news breaks, it's designed to represent a better when it's now become a place to welcome funds from around the world when people need to be heard. and the story told, this area of size well will be an island within a 100 years. with exclusive interviews, an in depth report here in germany lodge. it's going to rain, afford show you how to come to i would you 0 has teams on the ground to bring you more award winning documentaries and lives ah .

41 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on