• Welcome to the Online Discussion Groups, Guest.

    Please introduce yourself here. We'd love to hear from you!

    If you are a CompTIA member you can find your regional community here and get posting.

    This notification is dismissable and will disappear once you've made a couple of posts.
  • We will be shutting down for a brief period of time on 9/24 at around 8 AM CST to perform necessary software updates and maintenance; please plan accordingly!

Brianna White

Administrator
Staff member
Jul 30, 2019
4,655
3,454
“Okay, Google, what’s the weather today?” “Sorry, I don’t understand.”
Does the experience—interacting with smart machines that don’t respond to orders—sound familiar? This failure may leave people feeling dumbfounded, as if their intelligence were not on the same wavelength as the machines’. While this is not the intention of AI development (to interact selectively), such incidents are likely more frequent for “minorities” in the tech world.
The global artificial intelligence (AI) software market is forecast to boom in the coming years, reaching around 126 billion US dollars by 2025. The success of AI technology is forcing many existing companies to transform their business model and shift to AI. However, along with the advance, there is an increasing worry about the biases in the algorithm development of all these tools.
Continue reading: https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/businessreview/2021/10/05/how-to-prioritise-humans-in-artificial-intelligence-design-for-business/
 

Attachments

  • p0005168.m04838.prioritize_humans.jpg
    p0005168.m04838.prioritize_humans.jpg
    44.1 KB · Views: 33
  • Like
Reactions: Brianna White