tv Click BBC News July 16, 2017 3:30pm-4:01pm BST
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pensions mean they receive a "premium" — but he refused to repeat newspaper reports that he called them overpaid. the level of personal abuse and intimidation that election candidates face has reached a "tipping point", the head of the standards watchdog has warned. lord bew, has told the bbc it was a "dangerous moment" for uk politics. mps are considering tougher sentences for people convicted of acid attacks — after there were more than 400 offences in england and wales in the six months to april. eight people have been killed, and at least 49 were seriously injured during a stampede that broke out after a football match in senegal — reports say a wall collapsed as supporters tried to leave the stadium. at wimbledon, roger federer is two sets to love up in the men's singles final against the croat marin cilic, who has been suffering from an apparent foot injury. and lewis hamilton has won the british grand prix
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at silverstone for a fifth time, equalling the record held byjim clark and alain prost. he is nowjust one point behind top spot in the championship. now on bbc news, it's time for click. i'll be back with more news at the top of the this week... the cyborg's are coming, the eyeborg's are watching, the bar staff are serving and lara photographs a banana! this is adam jensen, star of the video game
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deus ex: human revolution. set in 2027, the poor chap has to undergo extensive cybernetic modifications after being severely injured. well, just ten years before those events might occur, that plot line doesn't seem that far off. for years now people have been body hacking, giving themselves extra abilities and, as our understanding of robotics has advanced, so has our creativity. meet rob spence, like the cyborg in the video game, he too has a bionic eye. it doesn't have terminator vision like this, yet, but it does record video. inside a prosthetic eye, which is an odd shape, they're not a sphere, a prosthetic eye, they're actually like a very thick contact lens. inside that is a battery, a video camera and a video
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transmitter all attached to a circuit board so they can talk to one another. the camera is turned on and off with a magnet. it doesn't look at all comfortable, is it in anyway comfortable? yeah, it's fine. i know it looks uncomfortable. the first consideration that looks the most uncomfortable, it looks like a 90s imac, you can see all the goods inside. like the battery and the wires, but that's covered by smooth plastic that, you know. so it's not like that. i don't have open wires and batteries, you know. 0h! that kind of made my stomach drop a little bit when i saw that. rob damaged his eye when he was nine and in 2009 began exploring the idea of a bionic eye. as a film—maker himself, he was fascinated with the idea that his eye could become a camera. it's like an absurd toy for a one—eyed film—maker.
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i used to watch the bionic man when i was a kid, the $6 million man. i had the action figure, you looked through the back of his head, through his bionic eye. i was looking at my nokia flip phone at the time i was like — this is pretty small. that's in fact who i called, i called nokia. they said — well, we'll call the camera module people in china. this is how you begin these things. it's very small, it's very challenging. we in fact used analogue technology. it does visual dropouts, which is the visual language of all video from the future, including princess leia asking for 0bi—wan‘s help. exactly — the future is analogue! yeah! since the initial prototype, rob and his engineers have gone through several upgrades. he now has one eye that glows red when it films and another camera eye that looks a bit more normal.
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i get calls from and emails from mum's whose kid hasjust lost an eye because it's some sort of fun thing to show a kid this maniac running around on videos and glowing red eye cameras and stuff. it's fun for them to look at that. they're now looking working on ways to transfer the technology to other people's prosthetic eyes. we're doing 3d scans of those now and then that creates a space that you can take into software to map on the technology that we're increasingly able to reproduce. some people golf, i like to make fake eye cameras and, you know, film things with it. activate eyeborg — now! 0h! right, that's the eye upgraded — now let's do the rest of the body. here's dave lee at mit in boston. mit's media lab is home to some of the most innovative tech
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research in the world, but there's one room here i find particularly fascinating. the mission of this lab is probably one of the most important goals of our time, they're trying to essentially eradicate disability. they want to make it so that if you lose a limb, it won't have any impact on your quality of life and they're making incredible progress. so we work on everything from creating new motors and designs for ankles and knees and artificial joints, all the way to marrying these biomechatronic devices with the human body through novel neural interfacing methods. evidence of this work can be seen with people like ryan cannon, complications after a broken leg left him needing an amputation. what's special about his new robotic leg is that it's doing something the human body can do instinctively, but it's extremely complex to engineer. the motor is able to work in such
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a way that simulates a real biological ankle joint. it uses on board sensors to interfere whether the leg is, for example, in the air or on the ground and perform actions that to the person feel much more like real walking than they would get from a passive prothesis. for amputees like ryan such innovations are life—changing. i can move in a more rhythmic, symmetrical way and being able to move in that manner allows me to walk at a faster pace for a longer distance and to do more activities during the day. this is not relying just on straight physics and mechanical design, it's relying on computing power. not all of the research here is about solving disability, this exoskeleton project is about augmenting humans. it allows the body to use much less energy when running or walking. it improves your ability to walk by 25%.
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so what that means is, if you were to walk 100 miles, it would only feel to you that you walked 75. we're able to do that today, right and those are devices that i would expect to see rolling out commercially in the next several years. we're already beginning to see this kind of technology deployed into the real world. us retail chain, lowes, is experimenting with kitting out its staff with exoskeletons, designed in virginia, which could give their employees more stamina at work. with this in mind, the lab at mit is now looking to the next huge question — how close are we to the point where people might actually want these kind of prosthetics instead of their real limbs? i definitely think that we are entering an age in which the line between biological systems and synthetic systems is going to be very much blurred. but what might be some of the drawbacks of having these additions to the human body? as there's widespread uptake, that they might only be available to people who have the financial
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ability to pay for them. it has been viewed a staggering... 2.9 billion times! billionaire elon musk launched the new all electric tesla, with a price tag of $35,000, it is supposed to be more affordable than the tesla previous efforts which have cost up to 100 ground, but faraday future has scrapped its plans to build a billion—dollar factory in the us state of nevada, leaving questions over the launch next year of the company's ff91 car. google+ deep mine artificial attention is attempting to learn how to walk. so far, research has been conducted in virtual environments but it could help robots to navigate
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one day in complex or unfamiliar spaces. a former nasa scientist build a super—sized super cycle which can fire a jet of water at 272 mph. but, it is so big at least you will see it coming! it says beds. it says — fashion, style, outfit, that's you. sometimes it's not that easy to put into words what you want to search for online and that's why companies are working on ways of us being able to take a simple picture and then search using that image. pinterest is a place all about images and ideas, they've had a form of visual search for a couple of years now, allowing you to focus in on a particular object within a picture. through a combination of image recognition and the data points attached to that image, including the hundreds
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of thousands of boards it may have been pinned to, it can select similar images. this january they upped their game though launching pinterest lens, a way of being able to search through a photo with no other data attached and from that search term it aims to come up with similar objects and related ideas. there we go, we've got a picture and something is emerging. it says "shoes." right, those are definitely shoes, but they don't exactly resemble mine. black shoe with blue laces, some men's shoes. so how does it actually do this? so there are two parts to visual search. the first is computer vision, which is a way of translating the information coming in through the camera into words. the second is the data set and the data set is the most important. so with pinterest lens, when you point your camera at something in the real world, the computer inside the phone translates that image into text and then it takes the text and it takes the image and runs a search against 100 billion pins
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on pinterest to find the ones that seem the most relevant. 0k, it knows it's a lemon, that's definitely a good start. now, if we scroll down. ok, i think you scroll through it and some of the results make sense, which is sort of like when you search with words because often you search then and a lot of the things don't make sense and some do. and having come up with those words, i've got a series of recipes that contain lemons. so we've got a lemon drizzle cake, a lemon polenta cake. we've now got some artwork of lemons. it's a lot better than it did on my boots and this's probably because this is a very simple image to recognise and understand. pinterest lens is also powering vision, the image search function in samsung's bixby which is currently only available on s8 phones in the us and korea. and so today we're announcing a new initiative called google lens. google lens is also due for release soon. the company says it'll be a new way of the computer being able to see and even act on its surroundings whilst you're talking
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to your google assistant. also working in this space is a chat bot called glamix, which is a way of photographing any item that you like, sending it to them via facebook messenger and receiving a response that should tell you where you can buy a similar item. so let's give this a go on my boots to start with. it worked with pictures found on instagram or your phone, eventually allowing you to narrow down results based on price bracket, brand and retailers. ok, this isn't a bad start. the bot uses artificial intelligence, machine learning and what it calls ‘content based image recognition‘ to search without the need for tags. as well as shopping for individual items, it aims to be able to help recreate a whole look. making clicking through to items so easy is of course amazing for retailers, but also if you're lacking in inspiration. so if someone passes
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you by and they're wearing something you really like, you need to be quick. got it! having spent a while testing both the results were sometimes surprisingly accurate and other times kind of questionable. but it is early days and the more this sort of technology is used, the more data it collects and the more reliable the results become. that's underwear. well, that explains the weird birthday present that lara bought me. now, earlier we looked at human beings attempts to become more robotic, but there's a whole lot of research that's attempting to make robots more human. it's not actually taking place at a robot art school like this, but it's nice to think it might be, isn't it? there is a long way to go in robotics, just picking up all those weirdly shaped every day objects is still an enormous challenge, requiring a robot to recognise a given object and to decide how
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exactly to pick it up. but a team at berkeley says that dex—net here is the most effective picker—upper ever seen. when not playing with lego, it's being taught and building up a huge database of 3d objects by its masters. when something new comes along, it uses its 3d sensor to compare it to this list, it then uses its neural network to figure out the best way to grasp it and it is said to get it right nearly all the time. the springy legs of this creature were 3d painted at uc san diego, they're designed to be able to more easily traverse difficult environments, such as disaster areas. as we know, even walking on flat surfaces is still an issue for most robots. 0uch! well, i say ouch, but of course these things don't feel pain. that said, there are those of us who are asking whether even feelings might one day be part of a robot's mind.
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at the simplest level it makes sense, robots are pretty expensive, you don't want them to run willy—nilly into fire and acid and toxic substances. but at a more complex level, we're looking ahead to a time when robots might interact with us on a more personal level as companion robots for the elderly, for those who are sick or are in pain and perhaps maybe they need to understand the similar sort of experience and perhaps develop something like what we call empathy. pain is notjust about us saying ouch, there's an emotional element to this as well, isn't there? i get quite upset when i get hurt. so are we actually talking about programming some kind of emotions into artificial intelligence? we don't really understand what emotions are in human beings. like you say, you might assume there's some sort of phenomenon that occurs around instances of pain. so hypothetical if we developed systems that worked like pain, might emotion develop off the back of that as well? there are those robots that do look so life—like,
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the boston dynamics‘ big dog and the walking robots, we actually feel quite sorry for them when they fall over or even when we see them being kicked. absolutely. when those videos were released online the reaction was like — oh no, you‘re bullying them, don‘t hurt them. they don‘t at this stage have that technology at all. there‘s no suggestion they do feel pain, but the human reaction is what i‘m really interested in. so is that going to inform how we behave towards robots in the future? is that where you‘re looking at applying our sympathies? absolutely. i mean, i think science fiction model of a human—like entity is probably not all that realistic. there may be more kind of cute models we‘ve seen already of robots that, sort of, pull on our heart strings in a more child—like way and there‘s those that suggest that we shouldn‘t have anything that looks human—like at all because it‘s disingenuous, it‘s cheating and it‘s tricking us into treating them like they‘re human beings or other beings. the doctor thinks that appearing to feel pain may make us treat robots with a bit more respect.
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of course what many people are worried about is how much respect the robots will have for us and, most of all, ourjobs. last week caterpillar invested seven million in this australian automated building company. now robots can build houses at the rate of 1,000 bricks an hour. ambition in the area is huge and for the first time out of the lab, eth in switzerland is working on much more ambitious structures like this undulating wall which has been largely built by robots. now an increasingly robotic workforce raises a number of issues and along with the worry of whatjobs will actually be left to us in the future, there is another one. fewer workers earning a wage, means fewer workers paying income tax on their earnings and that means less money going into the economy. now some tech brains, including that of bill gates, are calling for a robot tax
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to counter that and cat hawkins went to find out how that might work. almost everyone in the world who works pays tax on the money they earn, but at this restaurant in san francisco there are no waiting staff and robots plate the food. that work is currently not taxable and politicianjane kim is now looking into how this is changing the city‘s economy. so what we‘re seeing is after automation that you can hire less people in order to deliver products maybe quicker and more affordably. but it‘s one of the questions that we have, it‘s true this is really convenient, but at what cost? it‘s notjust restaurants, this picture is now seen across the city, from hotels and hospitals to the latest addition to the autonomous family, self—driving cars. policy makers have noticed, every time a robot take as human job, potential tax revenue is being lost. the research is showing us thatjobs
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are going to get lost over the next ten years and if before the great depression we could have predicted what would come afterwards, if government could have prepared for the job loss that occurred, wouldn‘t we do that? that is the level at which we are looking at potentially over the next ten years, in terms ofjob loss for this country. estimations of how manyjobs will be wiped out vary widely from study to study, but a recent report especially has stuck in jane‘s mind. it‘s estimated that robots will replace 37% jobs in the united states by the early 2030s. so the biggest concern is mass job displacement, lack of true, meaningful, high wage work. we are already seeing a decrease of that in san francisco where we have the fastest growing income gap in the country and a wealth gap that is akin to the country of rwanda, according to our own human services agency data and so we have a shrinking
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middle—class and we have this growing imminent threat that many of our meaningful, working—class and even middle—class jobs may go away to robots and automation. at cafe x, again a human worker has been replaced by a robot. an americano with milk, served by a robot. now, the human has a different role, advising on coffee beans and showing customers how to use the tablet to operate the robot. the owner is not sure about the idea of a tax on the replacement. i guess i find it a little odd because what robots are supposed to do is to increase productivity. that means it allows a shift in labour from doing highly repetitive, low productivity tasks to more useful things. it's not about eliminating people. actually, we have quite a big team. so in order to have this machine operate, there has to be a lot of engineers on software, hardware and manufacturing to build something like this. jobs like this require training and that‘s what supervisor kim wants
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a tax to help bring about. if you‘re a childcare worker or you‘re an in home support services worker, working with a senior or individual with disability, you often work three or four hours a day and you make minimum wage. so one of the ideas was, why not tax robots and invest in these povertyjobs and make them truly living wage careers for people. this would mean a robot tax potentially subsidising low paying, but essential jobs, so that the human employees would earn a living wage. currently, many people are working but not earning enough to live, leading several politicians around the world to float the idea of a universal basic income. this would be expensive for governments and supervisor kim is suggesting an automation tax could be a solution. if there‘s one thing that san francisco is known for, it‘s leading the conversation on technology and innovation, but as harder and harder questions are asked about automation and what this really means for people‘s jobs it seems appropriate that this city, which has added so much
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to the problem, is also grappling with what could be the solution. but the rise of robotic workers is playing out on a global scale and san francisco is not the only place trying to lead the conversation. in the eu, a proposal to tax robots was voted down earlier in the year and one of the commissioners who did so says robots will create more jobs, not reduce them. they are worried because they say robots they will take theirjobs, but i believe in progress. progress always created more jobs than progress used to destroy. the train is moving and speed is high and now it‘s up to us to be on that train or to stay and to wave to the leaving train. concerns about automation replacing human jobs has been felt sense the industrial revolution and more recently workers in the manufacturing industry
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have seen jobs disappear as automation takes hold. as the issue of a robot tax begins to spread further, a fundamental question still needs to be answered — what even is automation? in the context of robots of course automation is much broader and we have to find this definition. they gave this definition more than 100 years ago. politicians can no longer ignore the robots creeping into the workplace and while many of the big questions are still being thrashed out, it‘s clear that the issue of robot workers is becoming more and more of a political one. yeah, really interesting issues, aren‘t they? that was cat hawkins and this‘s it for this week. you can follow us on twitter @bbc click throughout the week and like us on facebook, too. that‘s it for now, though. thanks for watching and we will see you soon. hello, for many of us are aware that
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today has been a significant improvement on yesterday with much of scotland, ireland and northern england, broken cloud and sunny spells and cumbria here. some breaks in the showers spreading southwards and this evening, working into east anglia and south—east england before clearing away. 0vernight, cloud and outbreaks of rain in scotland with a brisk wind, elsewhere clearer skies and a cooler night to come, cooler than this away from town and city centres, some down into single figures before monday. the main story on monday and tuesday is this. high pressure building and settling
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things down, offering a lot of sunshine and temperatures heading up, where you start monday morning, this is the picture at 8am, on the cool side. do not be fooled as temperatures will head up quickly in the sunshine and for most areas, light winds. as we head north, they pick up into scotland, especially the north, it is breezy to windy here, much of scotland will be dry, in the northern isles, outbreaks of rain or showers holding temperatures down compared to elsewhere. again, after a cool start, the sunshine will boost temperatures quickly and widely and by the afternoon we are in the low to mid 20s. the sun is hazy across the south of the uk, something many of us can content with. the fine weather is set to continue, a lovely the david showers around the shetlands. we are watching the picture for tuesday. for most, fine again and quite hot.
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humidity building across the south in particular but we are watching this weather disturbance heading our way by the end of tuesday with the threat of thundery weather. hot conditions for many on with sunshine in parts of northern and western scotland, but notice across the far south and south—west, showers breaking out, tuesday into wednesday they left north and it could be a speu they left north and it could be a spell of thundery rain moving northwards but the south on wednesday, further thunderstorms could break out. heat coming down gradually by the end of wednesday, thunderstorms moving through and it will be cooler and fresher for us all this day forwards with sunshine and showers. this is bbc news. the headlines at 4pm... roger federer becomes the first man to win eight wimbledon titles after beating first—time finalist marin cilic in three sets. this is the scene live, where roger federer is
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reacting to his remarkable achievement. that win against a player who was clearly injured, marin cilic suffering a foot injury ina marin cilic suffering a foot injury in a disappointing end to his prospects. the chancellor, philip hammond, criticises cabinet colleagues for briefing against him as he defends his position on public sector pay. mr hammond says workers in the public sector receive a "premium" compared to the private sector. public sector workers on average are paid about 10% more than private sector workers. relative to private sector workers, are they overpaid? they are paid about a 10% premium relative to private sector workers.
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