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Sep 5, 2017
09/17
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it is not like a.i. was not there. i think if -- a.i. was good at some tasks that others were not good at. now, with new techniques, a.i. is inching into tasks a.i. was not good at but humans were good at. that is creating, first, a discussion about what other tasks machines will be able to do now that we have these techniques. second, what does this mean for the human job? that is something we need to see. however, there is another discussion, which is does this mean we are getting job loss because of intelligence? meaning i will have a.i. technique that will become so good that without much customization, i will be able to solve all a.i. tasks? i do not think we are getting there. scott: jim, you have been writing about labor and a.i. tell us your view. are we going to be jobless? [laughter] and is that good or bad? [laughter] james: not in the next 10 or 20 years. we have had a.i. in the workplace and marketplace since 1987. a.i. systems were used to do fraud section in credit card systems. but we had computer automation, some of whic
it is not like a.i. was not there. i think if -- a.i. was good at some tasks that others were not good at. now, with new techniques, a.i. is inching into tasks a.i. was not good at but humans were good at. that is creating, first, a discussion about what other tasks machines will be able to do now that we have these techniques. second, what does this mean for the human job? that is something we need to see. however, there is another discussion, which is does this mean we are getting job loss...
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Sep 3, 2017
09/17
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so what is a.i.? there are multiple definitions of a.i. one definition i like very much is the activity of making machines and intelligent. what we mean by intelligence is, for whatever the machine is divine best designed for, we expect the machine to react appropriately iss and the environment and reacting on it. that is what we mean by intelligent machine. but "intelligence" is a term we think of humans for. humans are intelligent. other animals are not. a lot of abilities humans have we expect an a.i. system to have. so what is going on right now, why we think a.i. is so much in the press. i was a graduate student 10 years ago -- the advice i was given was if you are in the job market, do not say you are doing a.i. term that wasas a so kind of poisonous. people thought nothing ever comes out of a.i. companyle is an a.i. from the birth. what is really going on is there fivewo sectors in the last to 10 years that came together to make some of the algorithms we are ready had in the field very successful. for some tasks that humans are good
so what is a.i.? there are multiple definitions of a.i. one definition i like very much is the activity of making machines and intelligent. what we mean by intelligence is, for whatever the machine is divine best designed for, we expect the machine to react appropriately iss and the environment and reacting on it. that is what we mean by intelligent machine. but "intelligence" is a term we think of humans for. humans are intelligent. other animals are not. a lot of abilities humans...
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Sep 26, 2017
09/17
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CNBC
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you've got this a.i. research and development group that's grown from 5,000 people to 8,000 people just in the past year it's now more than 5% of microsoft's head count how do you do that and look to the future without falling into that old xerox trap of having all these researchers in a group and not being able to get innovative products out the door >> it's a great question, john in some sense that's the existential question for us. 43 years after our formation, one of the things we realized is whatever novel new concept you've come up with, ultimately, will stop being novel. you will need to come up with the next thing in order to come up with the next thing, you have to perhaps build new capability like a.i. is something we've always had, but we are, in fact, have to be building new types of a.i. and to do that you need a culture that fosters that capability building long before, quite frankly, even the new concept is clear so one of the great benefits is the long-term approach microsoft has taken tow
you've got this a.i. research and development group that's grown from 5,000 people to 8,000 people just in the past year it's now more than 5% of microsoft's head count how do you do that and look to the future without falling into that old xerox trap of having all these researchers in a group and not being able to get innovative products out the door >> it's a great question, john in some sense that's the existential question for us. 43 years after our formation, one of the things we...
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Sep 9, 2017
09/17
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baby x, sort of the principal a.i.reation is based initially on photos from 18 months of his own daughter. from then he managed to get to the point where when a reporter took a look at his lab about a year ago, the baby was still a or was alreadyd amazingly lifelike and could follow your eye line and learn to recognize words and shapes and objects based on you holding a book up to the computer screen . it was already astonishingly emotionally reactive in terms of "gooding to you saying job, he got the apple write." -- right." >> we have done traditionally with the past issuesm we try to find one image. in this case we had three images would really like. we just ran with it. jonathan: how did you figure out -- if you just go in figure -- pick up bloomberg businessweek off the shelf -- >> the first one is about artificial intelligence. it's a very creepy, realistic digital baby he has been working on. we took a picture of him interacting with the baby on screen. that wants this guy to be a pioneer of deep-sea tourism . h
baby x, sort of the principal a.i.reation is based initially on photos from 18 months of his own daughter. from then he managed to get to the point where when a reporter took a look at his lab about a year ago, the baby was still a or was alreadyd amazingly lifelike and could follow your eye line and learn to recognize words and shapes and objects based on you holding a book up to the computer screen . it was already astonishingly emotionally reactive in terms of "gooding to you saying...
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Sep 10, 2017
09/17
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that will be the key to a.i. and transformative as it moves forward.liver: we have the details from our editor, jeff. jeff: reporter ashlee vance want to check out the lap of soul machines, the brainchild of a former university of auckland researcher. for quite a time, a star in hollywood. he was the head of cgi developments for the characters in "avatar" and "king kong." oliver: a few of the big movies that really push forward cgi and health faces are shown in movies. jeff: that's right. he spent decades trying to figure out how to make virtual faces look as human as they possibly can and he has gotten a soleegrees closer with machine and has already pushed its way into artificial intelligence operative make the creatures behind these faces possible.umanly as oliver: all right, sole machine is kind of a scary title. is -- that it is basically his way of sort of communicating very much so that you can re-create the human experience and human emotion through systems of algorithms and basically inputs that can affect how we react to things. what is his t
that will be the key to a.i. and transformative as it moves forward.liver: we have the details from our editor, jeff. jeff: reporter ashlee vance want to check out the lap of soul machines, the brainchild of a former university of auckland researcher. for quite a time, a star in hollywood. he was the head of cgi developments for the characters in "avatar" and "king kong." oliver: a few of the big movies that really push forward cgi and health faces are shown in movies. jeff:...
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Sep 10, 2017
09/17
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asould encourage the room, we all encounter this a.i. future, we have to hold onto credibility. >> any thoughts about the eat disruption over the xt hill? >> i am not too worried. set -- were finding it is an amazing opportunity to test new things out very rapidly, whether that is new material, lightweight cables, next generation of solar cells. tiplean buy this in mul sizes to get things on over for testing extremely quickly, and allows us to test out new sensors. it has been disrupted in a positive way. disruptive.n we launched our first satellite on spacex on may 1. th all the entrances into commercial launch, this has been a positive disruption that has allowed us more opportunities to get into orbit. >> this has been in the news. elon musk is one of our leading warnedeneurs and has immensesees in a.i. danger. he says he sees the threat of a third world war. what do you think about that? that it poses a real threat we're not thinking about? it all depends -- where do you decide that a man or woman needs to be involved in this problem
asould encourage the room, we all encounter this a.i. future, we have to hold onto credibility. >> any thoughts about the eat disruption over the xt hill? >> i am not too worried. set -- were finding it is an amazing opportunity to test new things out very rapidly, whether that is new material, lightweight cables, next generation of solar cells. tiplean buy this in mul sizes to get things on over for testing extremely quickly, and allows us to test out new sensors. it has been...
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Sep 19, 2017
09/17
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CNBC
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how to be flexible and have the old intel advantages at the same time and seems like self driving and a.i going to be the area that's the first big test >> from an investor standpoint, you have to wonder if he's talking about this to sort of say, hey, we're in this, too, because it's multiple, right, compared to some of the other quote, unquote, self driving car chip stocks is much, much lower and the performance has been underperforming. >> i specifically asked him about the analysts call where they say nvidia was the play in this area. that stock is up 3xover the past 12 months. he said that's the wrong bet and laid out his debate for why. >> stocks been in this channel for the better part of the year but worked it way to the upper end of that, around 37, 3715 good stuff, john seema mody back at hq, hey, seema. >> european stocks on a day which data shows rising economic sentiment in both germany and overall in the euro zone the ftse is higher getting a lift from upbeat retail news according to research firm cantor, sales at supermarkets in the uk are up 3.6% each saw sales rise more th
how to be flexible and have the old intel advantages at the same time and seems like self driving and a.i going to be the area that's the first big test >> from an investor standpoint, you have to wonder if he's talking about this to sort of say, hey, we're in this, too, because it's multiple, right, compared to some of the other quote, unquote, self driving car chip stocks is much, much lower and the performance has been underperforming. >> i specifically asked him about the...
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Sep 14, 2017
09/17
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the companies with which we invest and deploy our folks to help with data science, machine learning, a.i. the reason why that tends to be valuable is these are folks that have cut their teeth at places like facebook, google or amazon. they tend to be sort of these tier 1 10x to 100x folks so if they need some of that help, if they need some of that bootstrapping, we can also do that in partnership with them so their best days are still very much ahead of them. >> and you're hoping that the companies can hold on to the talent longer, before the talent splits off and says, you know what, with snapchat, twitter, both of these, people are -- they're hemorrhaging in the case of twitter for sure. in the case of snapchat i believe to believe the same is true. >> when you have attrition rates as high as 20% to 25%, i say this comment all the time. many of us may not know how to build a facebook, but we all know how not to, which is to have to replace your entire employee base every four or five years. >> is it possible that snapchat and blue apron were not victims of a broken underwriting proces
the companies with which we invest and deploy our folks to help with data science, machine learning, a.i. the reason why that tends to be valuable is these are folks that have cut their teeth at places like facebook, google or amazon. they tend to be sort of these tier 1 10x to 100x folks so if they need some of that help, if they need some of that bootstrapping, we can also do that in partnership with them so their best days are still very much ahead of them. >> and you're hoping that...
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Sep 18, 2017
09/17
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this leading-edge technology, i mean, autonomous cars, and a.i.re's law, more than anything else and so if you're building a technology for the long haul and you know it's going to benefit and really grow by moore's law, what do you do other than partner with the company that leads and really drives moore's law? and so, you know, i think that's why they're coming they're bringing their own intellectual property, bringing the compute and models of artificial intelligence for this they're going to work together with our zion but also our connectivity like 5g connectivity again, we have the able ility to bring the technology, when you build one of the cars think about the bumper to the data center. >> finally, related to that, brian, a few years ago baron's had a front page, watch out, intel, facebook is coming. facebook has been distracted by a few other things lately. just with its core social network. when you guys sort of skip ahead from mobile to the next platform being a.i., how many more different types of acquisitions and deals might you have
this leading-edge technology, i mean, autonomous cars, and a.i.re's law, more than anything else and so if you're building a technology for the long haul and you know it's going to benefit and really grow by moore's law, what do you do other than partner with the company that leads and really drives moore's law? and so, you know, i think that's why they're coming they're bringing their own intellectual property, bringing the compute and models of artificial intelligence for this they're going...
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Sep 21, 2017
09/17
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FBC
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we are the first company in to use a.i.elligence used in biology is bringing together all of the data and analytics that are helping us drive more of an understanding and patience. based on the understanding we are able to develop drugs and diagnostics. we announced our partnership with the department of defense first-ever a.i. driven product and diagnostics, which is able to help the dock during patient understand the difference between an enlarged over nine hyper coffee and prostate cancer. right now the only way to determine if a person has a prostate cancer or bpa is to do a biopsy and biopsy as you all know are very unsafe. unfortunately, the side effects can be and the tens or infections. the cost of determining if they have a prostate cancer is very high. but they are able to do three simple in a much less invasive manner, much more specific manner to determine if he has a higher chance of prostate cancer. >> why is it more difficult? maria: faster. >> exactly. human biology in and of itself is extremely complex. for
we are the first company in to use a.i.elligence used in biology is bringing together all of the data and analytics that are helping us drive more of an understanding and patience. based on the understanding we are able to develop drugs and diagnostics. we announced our partnership with the department of defense first-ever a.i. driven product and diagnostics, which is able to help the dock during patient understand the difference between an enlarged over nine hyper coffee and prostate cancer....
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Sep 23, 2017
09/17
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the second thing i wanted to talk about is this tension between questions about a.i.ptions in general, and how ibm, america's oldest tech company, is in the constant process of reinventing that business. she has come under fire for her performance at the company as revenues have declined quarter after quarter after quarter. it is always important, and to look at how she is from a personal and corporate responsibility in these incredibly difficult times we face, economic disruption, political disruption, how she makes the choice about where to take ibm, where it stands, and where it tries to make it move forward. carol: i found the ibm-watson stuff fascinating. they made a big bet on it. we don't know how the business is doing, do we? megan: we don't. she said watson is right where we want it. a lot of shareholders would disagree. here is what is so fascinating, and so personal about this interview. ginni, when they look at someone like her, one of the most known female ceo's, they fully form. she is always message impasse and passionate. her father left the family whe
the second thing i wanted to talk about is this tension between questions about a.i.ptions in general, and how ibm, america's oldest tech company, is in the constant process of reinventing that business. she has come under fire for her performance at the company as revenues have declined quarter after quarter after quarter. it is always important, and to look at how she is from a personal and corporate responsibility in these incredibly difficult times we face, economic disruption, political...
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Sep 16, 2017
09/17
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this is another key point about professional a.i. doctors do not want a black-and-white answer.'re a professional, you don't want it to say here is the answer. what a doctor wants is, ok, give me the possible answers, tell me why you believe it, can i see the research, the evidence, the percent confidence. what more would you like to know? these are really what we are doing. the took almost a year. first we are down to less than 30 days now. by the end of this year watson will have been trained on what causes 80% of the world's cancers. i find that kind of criticism out of line for what it is we are working on together with doctors. emily: ibm ceo ginni rometty. that does it for this edition of "best of bloomberg technology." we will be live from the tech crunch disrupt conference next week speaking with steve jurgensen and sam altman. tune in each day. 5 p.m. in new york, 2 p.m. in san francisco. remember, all episodes are livestreaming on twitter. that is all for now. this is bloomberg. ♪ so new touch screens... and biometrics. in 574 branches. all done by... yesterday. ♪ ♪ ba
this is another key point about professional a.i. doctors do not want a black-and-white answer.'re a professional, you don't want it to say here is the answer. what a doctor wants is, ok, give me the possible answers, tell me why you believe it, can i see the research, the evidence, the percent confidence. what more would you like to know? these are really what we are doing. the took almost a year. first we are down to less than 30 days now. by the end of this year watson will have been trained...
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Sep 23, 2017
09/17
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BLOOMBERG
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when she talks about watson and a.i. -- one of the biggest areas that have gone into his health care.ery personal. it is very personal to her that she believes watson is helping doctors, nurses, health care providers make better decisions. carol: it is three years since pil gross code -- left mco. julia: the performance at his new company has not been so headline worthy. john: this is the three-year mark coming up when he started managing the jannis henderson fund. that is like a traditional time to look and see how somebody's performance is. we look at bill gross. he has gone from being bonnie , the guy whoking beat 96% of his peers, to being middle of the pack. julia: are his average returns over that time, and wife is three-year so important? : they are about 2.3% at this particular fund. three years is a good gauge because at least there been a few different changes in the market. you want to see how it's going up at times. in the case of a bond fund, 20 just rates are rising and falling or rising and falling. he has been doing essentially a fund that is supposed to protect invest
when she talks about watson and a.i. -- one of the biggest areas that have gone into his health care.ery personal. it is very personal to her that she believes watson is helping doctors, nurses, health care providers make better decisions. carol: it is three years since pil gross code -- left mco. julia: the performance at his new company has not been so headline worthy. john: this is the three-year mark coming up when he started managing the jannis henderson fund. that is like a traditional...
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Sep 20, 2017
09/17
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KGO
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if you get the a.i. refs, they'll call every touch foul and i get away with a lot. their so we'll see how that works out. >> a federal court is blocking san francisco's plan to put warning labels on ads for sugary drinks. the ninth circuit court of appeals says the warning may violate freepd of speech because it is required only beverage ads and not other items with equal or more suga >>> tonight, contra costa board of visors is working on a pilot programor fundocumented immigrants. he 2,000 residents will receive a know your rights presentation. and 1,000 residents will receive free legal consultations. >> a big honor for a stanford professor who was awarded the word's largest international prize in education research of psychology professor carol dweck was named recipient for the eden prize. she said she could not be more excited. she'll use that award money in part to develop more effective materials for teachers. >>> you have to see this. new video of a crazy police chase in illinois. it happened in the small town. >> when the bulldozer backs into a patrol car s
if you get the a.i. refs, they'll call every touch foul and i get away with a lot. their so we'll see how that works out. >> a federal court is blocking san francisco's plan to put warning labels on ads for sugary drinks. the ninth circuit court of appeals says the warning may violate freepd of speech because it is required only beverage ads and not other items with equal or more suga >>> tonight, contra costa board of visors is working on a pilot programor fundocumented...
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Sep 3, 2017
09/17
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you put iot after a.i. i think all the devices that we call iot are actually in input to the applications that we think about only think about a.i. in that term i mean in the narrow definition, not the generalized super intelligence and will one day rule us all. the more narrow verticals of applications and the transportation sector and health care and a number of other sectors of the economy. is easy answer is iot everything connected. we can break that down into smaller and smaller categories. things like enterprise versus consumer. maybe just to set the stage a little bit, is useful to talk about some aspects of why it is interesting. it is growing a lot. that's a big reason we are talking about it. you look at analysts forecast coming out analysts are never wrong. the forecast is at least two times growth of the next five years. it is probably more than that. -- estimates differ on where we are starting from. by some counts we're at several billion already. others have said 15-10,000,000,000. there is a
you put iot after a.i. i think all the devices that we call iot are actually in input to the applications that we think about only think about a.i. in that term i mean in the narrow definition, not the generalized super intelligence and will one day rule us all. the more narrow verticals of applications and the transportation sector and health care and a number of other sectors of the economy. is easy answer is iot everything connected. we can break that down into smaller and smaller...
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Sep 12, 2017
09/17
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joining us now to discuss from ceo johnisco is a.i. burkey, a former apple ceo.as for siri? what was it intended to do versus what it is today? how much cap is there in realizing its full potential -- much gap is there in realizing its full potential? s brainstorm, the idea was to create something we could ask him any kind of question, and it would provide you with a solution. to your point, one of the things that has happened is that apple -- this reteam -- apple took over the siri team which turned it more into a general question and answer, entertainment, funny answers, sort of device. it lost some of the openness it originally had. heard criticism that there has not really been eight stickiness factor yet in place when it -- really been a stickiness factor yet in place when it comes to these a.i. what kind of functionality can they provide to make them more ubiquitous? companies do go a bit a straight with a focus on shininess. we try toiri team, focus on things that people do daily. we know that siri use has been dropping off daily year after year. when you
joining us now to discuss from ceo johnisco is a.i. burkey, a former apple ceo.as for siri? what was it intended to do versus what it is today? how much cap is there in realizing its full potential -- much gap is there in realizing its full potential? s brainstorm, the idea was to create something we could ask him any kind of question, and it would provide you with a solution. to your point, one of the things that has happened is that apple -- this reteam -- apple took over the siri team which...
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Sep 12, 2017
09/17
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KQED
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brisk modelingism a.i. recollection estimates insured losses could be 20 to 40 billion, including damages from wind and storm surge, but excludes the impact on the broader economy, and the loss is sure to come for the government's program. it's a staggering sum, two times the estimate for hurricane harvey, according to wells fargo. with the industry sitting on a mountain of capital, still small enough that insurance like assurance can manage it. >> we expect a loss of at least our retention, which is $127 million, but we don't think we'll come near the top of reinsurance and exposure of 1.1 billion. it's really early to have definitive -- but we've looked at flooding and storm surge, and we feel it's in the bonds of what we would have expected. >> near-term earnings will feel the expect, but analysts expect only a handful of yet to be identified reinsurers to take the biggest losses. both irma and harvey will make history, joining superstorm sandy, hurricanes andrew, even hurricane katrina, as tw the costli
brisk modelingism a.i. recollection estimates insured losses could be 20 to 40 billion, including damages from wind and storm surge, but excludes the impact on the broader economy, and the loss is sure to come for the government's program. it's a staggering sum, two times the estimate for hurricane harvey, according to wells fargo. with the industry sitting on a mountain of capital, still small enough that insurance like assurance can manage it. >> we expect a loss of at least our...
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Sep 19, 2017
09/17
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WJLA
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. >> she played a remarkably human-like a.i. in the sci-fi thriller.ng a first glimpse of vikander on a video character. >> definitely a different kind of role. >> even though it looks like a trailer, it is not. the full trailer drops today. >> they have a trailer for the trailer? >>t' trailer for the movie. >> are we in the matrix right now? >> sort of, hey, ang. thx >>> making news in america this morning, the double trouble. hurricane maria makes landfall in the caribbean island overnight. the prime minister already saying there is widespread devastation. even documents his own rescue after his roof was ripped off his home. plus, jose sweeping by the east coast bringing flooding and beach erosion tracking it all. >>> violent protests at georgia tech after a police shooting death on campus. we have new video of a patrol car burning and new details on arrests. >>> president trump gives a major speech at the united nations today. the harsh warnings he's expected to give to a number of countries. >>> a marathon runner's determination that shows the true
. >> she played a remarkably human-like a.i. in the sci-fi thriller.ng a first glimpse of vikander on a video character. >> definitely a different kind of role. >> even though it looks like a trailer, it is not. the full trailer drops today. >> they have a trailer for the trailer? >>t' trailer for the movie. >> are we in the matrix right now? >> sort of, hey, ang. thx >>> making news in america this morning, the double trouble. hurricane maria...
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Sep 29, 2017
09/17
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KGO
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. >> nah, this is an actor playing an a.i., right, playing a robot. >> i feel like that for sure. it's too good. >> you're totally right. this is a hubit, the uncanny valley. you're going the way the lips move and eyes move. there is no technology available to replicate that but people have been sucked in by this. people were having trouble separating it. in fact certain people reported thises aen aandroid and it's not true. you can see other videos as well, this is to do with some promotion for the playstation 4 exclusive game coming up called detroit. it's getting attention because in the tailer the motion capture technology they used has for people and gamers crossed the uncanny valley t is freakishly realistic. >> you see the pores in that guy's skin? >> i think technology has been holding back a little bit so to not freak people out. if you get people freaked out you're not selling your product. >> which is what you and i were at the very beginning of it. >> we're getting so close people are having trouble telling the difference. >>> cindy vega who watches on abc 30 in housto
. >> nah, this is an actor playing an a.i., right, playing a robot. >> i feel like that for sure. it's too good. >> you're totally right. this is a hubit, the uncanny valley. you're going the way the lips move and eyes move. there is no technology available to replicate that but people have been sucked in by this. people were having trouble separating it. in fact certain people reported thises aen aandroid and it's not true. you can see other videos as well, this is to do with...
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markets closed mostly lower, as you can see, there china flat up a fraction. >> putting identity in a.iell you about it hurricane irma bearing down on caribbean the category fooifr storm making landfall overnight toward prosecutor u.s. virgin islands on phone governor of the u.s. virgin islands. >> thanks for joining. >> how are you -- >> real question how are you the people of the require vin isles how are you preparing. >> we have been -- talking with people four or five days experience of hurricanes islands st. john st. thomas a serious blow on this storm with eye passing 20 miles to the north we are expecting 110, 120 miles per hour sustained winds on those islands,traveling 15, 16 miles per hour hoping moves through rapidly we are prepared mobilized heavy equipment folks are the shutters closed i was there this morning st. croix, not on road going to hunker down let it pass through, start repairs and rebuilding where necessary partners with federal government, agency the department of defense is just really, really wonderfully i must say the trump administration has really been ver
markets closed mostly lower, as you can see, there china flat up a fraction. >> putting identity in a.iell you about it hurricane irma bearing down on caribbean the category fooifr storm making landfall overnight toward prosecutor u.s. virgin islands on phone governor of the u.s. virgin islands. >> thanks for joining. >> how are you -- >> real question how are you the people of the require vin isles how are you preparing. >> we have been -- talking with people four...
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Sep 24, 2017
09/17
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CNBC
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sales. 10 times sales is where a lot of the big numbers got done if you like nvidia, you like it for a.i., possibly crypto mining, then you have to look at amd thmpts amd. this is a stock that is expected to grow 10% a year they're expected to decelerate to that next year. amd is a stock that tradesat 2 1/2 times sales. i look at a constructive chart we were talking about it before. only up 17% on the year. they're expected at 14.3 earnings the week of october 16th, 17th, that sort of 24i7th. there was a rumor that possibly they're going to get some business from tesla. it was debunked. i wanted to look at a defined risk trade i wanted to target a move back to the prior highs just below 16 i want to give myself room down to the up trend. price of options is pretty cheap. again, i'm targeting october exploration. i simply want to buy a car the stock was trading about $13.20 you can buy the 13 1/2 strike call in october that breaks even at $14.05. it gives me room back up towards the prior highs. i'm thinking this runs into the earnings exhibit if you get a move because the smh is consolid
sales. 10 times sales is where a lot of the big numbers got done if you like nvidia, you like it for a.i., possibly crypto mining, then you have to look at amd thmpts amd. this is a stock that is expected to grow 10% a year they're expected to decelerate to that next year. amd is a stock that tradesat 2 1/2 times sales. i look at a constructive chart we were talking about it before. only up 17% on the year. they're expected at 14.3 earnings the week of october 16th, 17th, that sort of 24i7th....
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141
Sep 15, 2017
09/17
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WPVI
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eye 141
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a seven month old was flown to a.i. dupont hospital. four adults were taken to christiana.re's no word yet on their conditions. >>> word late today that josÉ is a hurricane again having regained strength out in the ocean about 485 miles southwest of bermuda. the big question, might josÉ cause us some problems next week? meteorologist cecily tynan is keeping a close eye. cecily what's the story so far? >> and jim the biggest concern with josÉ is still what it's doing to the ocean producing large swells, the risk of rip currents on a weekend when a lot of people are going to be heading to the beach. it's going to be warm and sunny. so, this is the latest. maximum sustained winds 75 miles per hour. it's getting more organized moving to the northwest at about 10 miles per hour. it looks like over the weekend on sunday it will start to make that turn up to the north. now, the latest forecast track very similar to the same one we had last night keeps the center of this track about 200 miles off shore. however, we all know about that cone of uncertainty and the western edge does b
a seven month old was flown to a.i. dupont hospital. four adults were taken to christiana.re's no word yet on their conditions. >>> word late today that josÉ is a hurricane again having regained strength out in the ocean about 485 miles southwest of bermuda. the big question, might josÉ cause us some problems next week? meteorologist cecily tynan is keeping a close eye. cecily what's the story so far? >> and jim the biggest concern with josÉ is still what it's doing to the...
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248
Sep 1, 2017
09/17
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KQED
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eye 248
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ten years from now, i would trust an a.i. doctor over a human doctor any day, because the a.i. doctor will be looking at all of my data. >> reporter: and it isn't just happening at wadhwa's house, but also nearby, where facebook was built. >> mark zuckerberg stayed here his first summer in palo alto. >> reporter: stanford university computer science undergrad josh browder, working to fulfill a shakespearean ambition: kill all the lawyers. >> i'm trying to replace the $200 billion legal industry with artificial intelligence. >> reporter: browder's created do not pay, an app he built to fight parking tickets in the u.k., where he'd amassed dozens, and couldn't afford the tab. >> and so i had to figure out other ways to get the tickets dismissed-- if the signage is not up to code, or if the parking bay is illegally too small. there are these letters where if you cite the code, cite how your case applies to it, you can get out of the ticket. there's nothing the government can do. >> reporter: browder claims a 60% success rate, and has expanded do not pay to the u.s., and to other l
ten years from now, i would trust an a.i. doctor over a human doctor any day, because the a.i. doctor will be looking at all of my data. >> reporter: and it isn't just happening at wadhwa's house, but also nearby, where facebook was built. >> mark zuckerberg stayed here his first summer in palo alto. >> reporter: stanford university computer science undergrad josh browder, working to fulfill a shakespearean ambition: kill all the lawyers. >> i'm trying to replace the...
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50
Sep 30, 2017
09/17
by
CNBC
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eye 50
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a couple of big assets they bought they bought mobileye for $15 billion and there were a couple of a.is in between that. this is a company that's pretty dead set on not missing the next big technology trends the way they did the past few years. when i look at volvo, it's interesting. this is a five year. it's banging up against the 52 week high made earlier this year 38.45. you can see clearly that's a multi-year look at this this is one of the megacap stocks carter has been talking about this on ""fast money"" for the last couple of months. that has a ton of room to go lastly, trades about 12 1/2 times well below market multiple my bullish these tis sis on this stock for most of this year is you're going to digest this if you get high single digits earnings growth that people are not expecting, you're expecting a $3 earnings level. this can be rerated back to probably, 13, 14 times you have a 45, $46 stock. i think investors will start thinking about that. options prices are cheap i'm looking at the earnings event. i want to look at october 27 i want to target this event. i've been lo
a couple of big assets they bought they bought mobileye for $15 billion and there were a couple of a.is in between that. this is a company that's pretty dead set on not missing the next big technology trends the way they did the past few years. when i look at volvo, it's interesting. this is a five year. it's banging up against the 52 week high made earlier this year 38.45. you can see clearly that's a multi-year look at this this is one of the megacap stocks carter has been talking about this...
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Sep 25, 2017
09/17
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CNBC
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it. >> my a.i.he next phase to understanding the web. >>> next, one place amazon cannot win according to jp morgan their analyst insists off-price retail like tjx and ross stores is a treasure hunt model amazon simply can't copy online michael, is he right >> i don't know if i would consider t.j.maxx right for treasure hunting i understand what they're talking about. >> i do. >> it's a serendipity, don't know what you're looking for, you want to see what came in. >> just want a deal. >> it makes total sense. it's a little bit consensus of a call. >> more than a little bit. >> how the street views ross and t.j.maxx. >> the companies have had -- partly because they're benefiting from all of the inventory that the bankrupt retailers -- >> exactly, not only that, the brands are very conscious of where and when they make their stuff available, right, if it's just past the season, naid rather put it in the store than just throw it up online. >> i do think there's a point about off price sort of extreme di
it. >> my a.i.he next phase to understanding the web. >>> next, one place amazon cannot win according to jp morgan their analyst insists off-price retail like tjx and ross stores is a treasure hunt model amazon simply can't copy online michael, is he right >> i don't know if i would consider t.j.maxx right for treasure hunting i understand what they're talking about. >> i do. >> it's a serendipity, don't know what you're looking for, you want to see what came...
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124
Sep 21, 2017
09/17
by
CNBC
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> nvidia falling on the back of the reports that tesla is working with advanced micro devices on an a.is use the i v nvidia chips nvidia down 2.5% right now. >>> apple's iphone 8 and 8 plus will be available starting tomorrow but the latest phone is rolling out to just lukewarm reviews and there are concerns that some consumers are just going to wait for the iphone x >> shiares of apple down 5% sinc the new iphones were revealed last week. joining us, ben dunbar, investment adviser from gerber kawasaki welcome to you both. ben, you're bullish on apple what do you make of the price declines we've seen? >> well, apple's run up over po 30% this year. when a stock runs up, it's a very normal thing do it's not a problem when you look at long-term investment wise. >> tom, what's your problem with apple right now? >> basically, they have two issues, near-term issue, lo longer-term issue. near term, not innovation of new phones argument can be made other manufacturers are doing facial recognition. while this could be a catalyst for usage of augmented reality, consumers can already use other dev
> nvidia falling on the back of the reports that tesla is working with advanced micro devices on an a.is use the i v nvidia chips nvidia down 2.5% right now. >>> apple's iphone 8 and 8 plus will be available starting tomorrow but the latest phone is rolling out to just lukewarm reviews and there are concerns that some consumers are just going to wait for the iphone x >> shiares of apple down 5% sinc the new iphones were revealed last week. joining us, ben dunbar, investment...
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Sep 19, 2017
09/17
by
KGO
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eye 77
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. >> she played a remarkably human-like a.i. in the sci-fi thriller. first glimpse of vikander on a video game based on the character. >> definitely a different kind of role. >> even though it looks like a trailer, it actually is not. the full trailer drops today. >> they have a trailer for the trailer? >> it's a preview for the trailer for the movie. >> are we in the matrix right now? >>> good morning, i'm diane macedo. >> i'm kendis gibson. here's some of the news we're following on this tuesday morning on "world news now." donald trump is stepping to the stage for his first speech before the united nations. he's expected to take a hard line and asks other world leaders to do the same. we're tracking that ahead. >>> we're tracking two hurricanes overnight. maria is slamming the caribbean with virtually the same ferocity irma did earlier this month. meanwhile, jose is bringing high winds and strong sieve surf to the east coast. >>> we're getting more information on a tour bush crash. the driver of a tour bus used to drive for the city and was fired fo
. >> she played a remarkably human-like a.i. in the sci-fi thriller. first glimpse of vikander on a video game based on the character. >> definitely a different kind of role. >> even though it looks like a trailer, it actually is not. the full trailer drops today. >> they have a trailer for the trailer? >> it's a preview for the trailer for the movie. >> are we in the matrix right now? >>> good morning, i'm diane macedo. >> i'm kendis gibson....
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30
Sep 23, 2017
09/17
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BLOOMBERG
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eye 30
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we leverage a lot of great technologies, especially around machine learning and a.i.beauty of of alphabet. we have the independence to grow our business and leverage different technologies. emily: google just a game big stake in htc. i'm wondering what that means for nest and what you know about the strategy. marwan: it is a great opportunity for the hardware team. well.nows the business i think it is just a natural extension for them. emily: you mentioned google home. this is huge competitive territory. google, amazon has the eco. -- echo. idc the competition shaping up? marwan: it is in the early stage for all of us. there are a lot of opportunities to change the experience for consumers. at the end of the day consumers will decide what is best for them. emily: how is the rest of the business doing? you unveiled the new thermostat. talk about sales in general. marwan: we are doing very well and continue to grow. we talk about our products growing at a pace -- it is accelerating. this year we will ship more product than we ship in the last two years combined. that gi
we leverage a lot of great technologies, especially around machine learning and a.i.beauty of of alphabet. we have the independence to grow our business and leverage different technologies. emily: google just a game big stake in htc. i'm wondering what that means for nest and what you know about the strategy. marwan: it is a great opportunity for the hardware team. well.nows the business i think it is just a natural extension for them. emily: you mentioned google home. this is huge competitive...
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78
Sep 27, 2017
09/17
by
CNBC
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eye 78
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i think this a.i. data analytics is where poland is strong.here are a couple of promising companies. maybe this could be the next hub. >> talking to a banker from poland who has a 4% gdp figure on the table for the year, the ecb needs to get less accommodative otherwise we will risk bubbles in poland, warsaw and elsewhere? >> the central bank policy all around the world and in europe has to be driven by the ecb. i think polish monetary policy is an easier situation than the ecb. we expect hikes, but only late next year. >> do you see bubbles being created? i look at bubbles north of poland and south of poland i don't know if there's a warsaw housing bubble, i would imagine there is >> theoretical but also practical perspective, the whole cdp has changed. you and me living in big cities in europe, you are probably exposed to bigger inflation than the official cpi index it makes rate setting very difficult. >> all right we will leave it there real pleasure getting an update. i'm glad to see poland is making a good fest of it. >> thank you >> let
i think this a.i. data analytics is where poland is strong.here are a couple of promising companies. maybe this could be the next hub. >> talking to a banker from poland who has a 4% gdp figure on the table for the year, the ecb needs to get less accommodative otherwise we will risk bubbles in poland, warsaw and elsewhere? >> the central bank policy all around the world and in europe has to be driven by the ecb. i think polish monetary policy is an easier situation than the ecb. we...
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Sep 20, 2017
09/17
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KOFY
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eye 104
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i went a little too far, "a.i."'t regret clapping back to anyone or talking to my nance on twitter. i do regret using my former coach's name and the organization i played for. that was childish and idiotic, all those type of words and i regret that and apologize but i don't think i'll ever stop engaging with my fans. i think they, you know, really enjoy it and i think that's a good way to connect us all, but i -- i'll scale back a little bit right now and just focus on playing basketball. >> stephan curry also had a rough day on twitter. espn's darren raffel posted how much money is being taken out of the warrior stars' $34 million annual salary leaving him with only 15 million take home. curry's reaction, quote. that's sunshine expensive blessings. hopefully he won't be asked to be traded to a team with no state income tax. >>> warriors gm bob myers is everywhere these days. they were at san quentin to play basketball against the inmates and today it was bob myers day at his alma mater and he deserves all the atten
i went a little too far, "a.i."'t regret clapping back to anyone or talking to my nance on twitter. i do regret using my former coach's name and the organization i played for. that was childish and idiotic, all those type of words and i regret that and apologize but i don't think i'll ever stop engaging with my fans. i think they, you know, really enjoy it and i think that's a good way to connect us all, but i -- i'll scale back a little bit right now and just focus on playing...
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199
Sep 4, 2017
09/17
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FOXNEWSW
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eye 199
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the rise of a.i.mean that things that we thought could only be done by a human will only be done in some way, shape or form with the assistance of automation. so i think people have talked about this merger and the role of the government in it. but i think the big take-away here is the role of the government in creating jobs of the future and looking to the future and helping children of today, college graduates of tomorrow to find a way to achieve and find economic security and the jobs that will still exist and the new jobs that will exist as technology is a bigger part of our lives. >> lauren: michael, you think this is the role of the government? >> no. the role is to empower businesses to train employees in a different way and create different types of jobs. i don't think the onus is up to the government. it's up to the business to have the responsibility to keep that training and make sure that employees are getting what they need to compete tomorrow. >> lauren: what does that look like? do we h
the rise of a.i.mean that things that we thought could only be done by a human will only be done in some way, shape or form with the assistance of automation. so i think people have talked about this merger and the role of the government in it. but i think the big take-away here is the role of the government in creating jobs of the future and looking to the future and helping children of today, college graduates of tomorrow to find a way to achieve and find economic security and the jobs that...
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134
Sep 15, 2017
09/17
by
CNBC
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eye 134
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it's basically part of the so-called growing up process of a.i. and machine learning so the more data they compile about user behavior, and the more additional restrictions they put into the so-called automated system, as rob mentioned, as ross mentioned, then the output that they get from the machine learning will be a little bit more proper and -- >> come on, you're making an excuse here. they took money from the russian government, they're taking money from hate groups i mean, who going to advertise to jew haters like the tiki torch people i don't get, like, why this exists and it's an excuse. now, they have a monopoly so they can't thurt thehurt their . i get that there's still no excuse for it in growing -- they're way grown up. >> not at all. i completely agree with you. there is no excuse for it. i'm just saying that the company hopefully will take some actions to adjust these so-called machine-learning a.i.-driven types of systems i completely agree, there's no excuse for this. >> here's a fun idea which i'm sure the companies will love, a
it's basically part of the so-called growing up process of a.i. and machine learning so the more data they compile about user behavior, and the more additional restrictions they put into the so-called automated system, as rob mentioned, as ross mentioned, then the output that they get from the machine learning will be a little bit more proper and -- >> come on, you're making an excuse here. they took money from the russian government, they're taking money from hate groups i mean, who...
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116
Sep 12, 2017
09/17
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CNBC
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. >>> when we come back, we'll talk about the future of a.i seibel systems founder tom seibel live fromelivering alpha. but first, rick santelli, what are you watching today never mind we'll talk to rick hopefully, he's watching his treasury yield bounce, along with the u.s. dollar 'lbeig b im. wel rhtack. not rebalancing your portfolio. pursuing your passion, not reacting to market downturns. focused on what you love, not how your money will last through retirement. let us help you with those decisions, and get on with your life. we make it easier to plan for retirement with day one target date funds from prudential. look forward to your 401k plan. can we at least analyze can we push the offer online? legacy technology can handcuff any company. but "yes" is here. the new app will go live monday? yeah. with hewlett-packard enterprise, we're transforming the way we work. with the right mix of hybrid it, everything computes. we cut the price of trades to give investors even more value. and at $4.95, you can trade with a clear advantage. fidelity, where smarter investors will always be. >>
. >>> when we come back, we'll talk about the future of a.i seibel systems founder tom seibel live fromelivering alpha. but first, rick santelli, what are you watching today never mind we'll talk to rick hopefully, he's watching his treasury yield bounce, along with the u.s. dollar 'lbeig b im. wel rhtack. not rebalancing your portfolio. pursuing your passion, not reacting to market downturns. focused on what you love, not how your money will last through retirement. let us help you...
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Sep 25, 2017
09/17
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CNBC
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eye 64
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does someone need to do it for them, or is this an impossible task with the rise of a.i. data like this, as we've been warned >> well, it's their system they should be able to run it, right? i think that's sort of an excuse that it's real hard and i think i've written this before they always tend to say it's real hard when it's easy, when they do ads or anything else i know it's not the same thing i'm not claiming that it's a simple thing what i'm saying is that it's their system, it's their platform, and it's not, as i said about 50 times, it's not a benign platform and they have to get ahold of it, or else they are going to be scrutinized by the government, which is not welcome by anyone in silicon valley for the government to get their hands on these platforms and regulate them in any significant way, at least. >> one last point about this, kara, the post story says -- they quote an analyst who says, "the feeling that silicon valley was the darling of our markets and of our society, that sentiment is definitely turning. i assume you go along with that? >> you know, i d
does someone need to do it for them, or is this an impossible task with the rise of a.i. data like this, as we've been warned >> well, it's their system they should be able to run it, right? i think that's sort of an excuse that it's real hard and i think i've written this before they always tend to say it's real hard when it's easy, when they do ads or anything else i know it's not the same thing i'm not claiming that it's a simple thing what i'm saying is that it's their system, it's...
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109
Sep 15, 2017
09/17
by
CNBC
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line so they don't have to have people watch all this, but it's a problem they need to address before a.i going to be ready. >> and by the way, we're going to talk to julie in a moment, who did this story and did this entire investigation some categories ended up with an audience that was too small, so another category was suggested for the ad buyer, in this case, the reporter so we'll talk to her about the intricacies of how this all worked out >> and how facebook is responding i want to get more on the google case, though details on the google class action let's bring in josh lipton, who's been following it. good morning, josh >> sara, the complaint filed in san francisco slamming google for paying women less than men for similar work a lawyer for the three former google employees who filed that suit says there are many more women expressing similar concerns >> we've been contacted by over 90 women and interviewed dozens of women, and these three women have stepped forward to be on this class action complaint, but they are simply representatives of many, many more women >> for example,
line so they don't have to have people watch all this, but it's a problem they need to address before a.i going to be ready. >> and by the way, we're going to talk to julie in a moment, who did this story and did this entire investigation some categories ended up with an audience that was too small, so another category was suggested for the ad buyer, in this case, the reporter so we'll talk to her about the intricacies of how this all worked out >> and how facebook is responding i...
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150
Sep 19, 2017
09/17
by
WPVI
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eye 150
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. >> she played a remarkably human-like a.i. in the sci-fi thriller.aracter. >> definitely a different kind of role. >> even though it looks like a trailer, it is not. the full trailer drops today. >> they have a trailer for the trailer? >> it's a preview for the trailer for the movie. >> are we in the matrix right now? >> sort of, hey, ang. that's it for this half ur >> ♪ >> "action news." delaware valley's leading news program with matt o'donnell, tamala edwards, karen rogers and meteorologist, david murphy. >> ♪ >> good morning. it's 4:00 a.m. on this tuesday september 19th. >> we're on a half hour early this morning as we track hurricane jose. >> the category one storm is far off the coast but it is churning surf and causing strong currents at area beaches. we'll have team coverage from the jersey shore. >> hurricane maria wavers from a super strong category five storm to a now still extremely dangerous four and threatens islands still cleaning up from irma. >> let's get going taking a first look at your weather and traffic. we've got dave
. >> she played a remarkably human-like a.i. in the sci-fi thriller.aracter. >> definitely a different kind of role. >> even though it looks like a trailer, it is not. the full trailer drops today. >> they have a trailer for the trailer? >> it's a preview for the trailer for the movie. >> are we in the matrix right now? >> sort of, hey, ang. that's it for this half ur >> ♪ >> "action news." delaware valley's leading news program...
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190
Sep 19, 2017
09/17
by
MSNBCW
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eye 190
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this is, vladimir putin was talking about the artificial intelligence and says, who ends up owning a.i. president trump talks about coal miners. do democrats, are they taking this serious enough and need to look at this in a bigger, broader way? >> yes, absolutely. we absolutely do. i'm a child of the '50s and remember when we had to do duck and cover drills. we jumped under desks in order to protect ourself against nuclear attack. well, there is a weapon now, cyber warfare, which is insidious and ultimately more destabilizing than the nuclear warfare. and we have to understand that. and i think you're right, i think we have focused too much on what the, you know, what the trump, whether or not he colluded or didn't collude. that is up to special counsel mueller and the investigative committees in the house and senate. we have to, as americans, understand what has happened here. and that cyber warfare is pervasive and can be weaponized and we have to have the proper defenses. and if the president of the united states, for whatever reason, because we feels like his, you know, his electi
this is, vladimir putin was talking about the artificial intelligence and says, who ends up owning a.i. president trump talks about coal miners. do democrats, are they taking this serious enough and need to look at this in a bigger, broader way? >> yes, absolutely. we absolutely do. i'm a child of the '50s and remember when we had to do duck and cover drills. we jumped under desks in order to protect ourself against nuclear attack. well, there is a weapon now, cyber warfare, which is...
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48
Sep 13, 2017
09/17
by
BLOOMBERG
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eye 48
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big technologies, a.i., the machine learning. what makes you most excited in the technology space, anything to do with healthcare from what you just said. >> absolutely. i think we have huge benefits to come from healthcare the u.s. economy spent an norm out amount of healthcare. yet people are not living any longer in the u.s. how is it we're spending so much more money, breakthroughs in new drugs yet longevity is not increasing any more. don't just depend on drugs. you have to go further upstream and health monitoring. using wearables is one way. >> thank you. we'll get further thoughts from him throughout the hour. unprecedented access to the alibaba group and jack ma. you can catch our half-hour program, alibaba, the global disruptor friday at 8:00 p.m. in new york. coming up, we bring you our exclusive interview with the u.b.s., andrea orcel. ♪ anna: welcome back, everybody. this is bloomberg daybreak. asian equity markets making some modest gains today. most of them in positive territory. e nikkei up by just shy of .5%. >>
big technologies, a.i., the machine learning. what makes you most excited in the technology space, anything to do with healthcare from what you just said. >> absolutely. i think we have huge benefits to come from healthcare the u.s. economy spent an norm out amount of healthcare. yet people are not living any longer in the u.s. how is it we're spending so much more money, breakthroughs in new drugs yet longevity is not increasing any more. don't just depend on drugs. you have to go...