Tag: IFTTT
Kill the tech bro, save the world: how CEOs became Hollywood’s new supervillains
Hollywood has a history of drawing on collective fears. The dawn of the atomic age saw a boom in world-ending disasters, James Bond battled Russians all throughout the cold war, and the post-9/11 era saw a grimly predictable rise in Arab and Muslim bad-guys. Read full Article
Read moreEurope, not the U.S., is now the most powerful regulator of Silicon Valley
Europe implemented a sweeping overhaul of digital-privacy laws on Friday that has reshaped how technology companies handle customer data, creating a de-facto global standard that gives Americans new protections and the nation’s technology companies new headaches. Read full Article
Read moreFree Cash to Fight Income Inequality? California City Is First in U.S. to Try
STOCKTON, Calif. — This town in California’s Central Valley has long functioned as a display case for wrenching troubles afflicting American life: The housing bust that turned Stockton into an epicenter of a national foreclosure disaster and plunged the city into bankruptcy. Read full Article
Read moreIs Artificial Intelligence the Future of Advisory Work?
No doubt you’ve been hearing a bit lately about artificial intelligence (AI), but what relevance does AI and associated technologies have for business advisors, coaches, and professional service firms? Is AI a potential competitive advantage, just another distraction, or a replacement for the adv Read full Article
Read moreMark Zuckerberg, Elon Musk and the Feud Over Killer Robots
SAN FRANCISCO — Mark Zuckerberg thought his fellow Silicon Valley billionaire Elon Musk was behaving like an alarmist. Mr. Read full Article
Read moreWhat the AI Behind AlphaGo Can Teach Us About Being Human
Aja Huang dips his hand into a wooden bowl of polished black stones and, without looking, thumbs one between his middle and index finger. Peering through wire-rim glasses, he places the black stone on the board, in a mostly empty zone, just below and to the left of a single white stone. Read full Article
Read moreWhat News-Writing Bots Mean for the Future of Journalism
This story is part of our special coverage, The News in Crisis. When Republican Steve King beat back Democratic challenger Kim Weaver in the race for Iowa’s 4th congressional district seat in November, The Washington Post snapped into action, covering both the win and the wider electoral trend. Read full Article
Read moreCybersecurity specialist, career with a global future
Cybersecurity specialist is set to become one of the information sector’s leading professions in near future, researchers have predicted. This trend in the job market will largely be driven by the Internet of Things (IoT), which will see some 47 billion devices connected to the internet. Read full Article
Read moreHarvester of Facebook Data Wants Tighter Controls Over Privacy
Sen. Jerry Moran (R., Kan.), chairman of the Senate’s consumer protection subcommittee, said he was considering joining in an effort by Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D., Conn.) to pass a privacy bill of rights in Congress. Read full Article
Read moreIs AI the foundation for the future of professional services?
New technologies are already changing the way operations are run and have the huge potential to drastically change the way the industry functions in the future. Companies must be prepared to embrace this or be left behind. Read full Article
Read moreAI rest my case
The internet has for some time hummed with anxious murmuring about the Singularity. Read full Article
Read moreBest Futurists Ever
Through history there have been many wonderful visionaries, seers, futurists and writers who have presented us with glimpses of the future. Read full Article
Read moreWe Must Not Accept an Algorithmic Account of Human Life
One remarkable development of twentieth century science is the discovery that both physical structures and the communication of ideas can be assembled on the basis of algorithms that make use of codes. Read full Article
Read moreThe Future of Humans? One Forecaster Calls for Obsolescence
HOMO DEUS A Brief History of Tomorrow By Yuval Noah Harari Illustrated. 449 pp. Harper/HarperCollins Publishers. $35. “Organisms are algorithms,” Yuval Noah Harari asserts in his provocative new book, “Homo Deus. Read full Article
Read moreThe rise of the useless class
Historian Yuval Noah Harari offers a bracing prediction: just as mass industrialization created the working class, the AI revolution will create a new unworking class. Read full Article
Read moreFacebook, Social Media and technology needs to be fixed for the good of humanity
Social media and other attention-based internet platforms have certainly captured our attention: adults in the U.S. spent nearly six hours per day on digital media last year. Read full Article
Read moreForrester Predicts That AI-enabled Automation Will Eliminate 9% of US Jobs In 2018
A new Forrester Research report, Predictions 2018: Automation Alters The Global Workforce, outlines 10 predictions about the impact of AI and automation on jobs, work processes and tasks, business success and failure, and software development, cybersecurity, and regulatory compliance. Read full Article
Read moreNeighborhood social media platform Nextdoor makes us regret the internet
Back in the 90s, before the internet ruled every facet of social life, Americans possessed a ready-made stereotype of what a “neighbor” archetype might look like: nosy, yet endearing; occasionally nettlesome, yet happy to loan a cup of sugar. Read full Article
Read more10 princípios do futuro que você precisa conhecer hoje
Máquinas dominando o homem, carros autônomos e até voadores, viver eternamente. Seria o fim dos tempos? Muitas pessoas acreditam em um futuro caótico, mas na visão do futurista e CEO da Agência do Futuro, Gerd Leonhard, o dia de amanhã é melhor do que pensamos. Read full Article
Read moreArtificial intelligence can predict how you’ll look decades from now
Police searching for a long-lost person or fugitive sometimes have little more to go on than an old photograph. Artists or computer programs can attempt to predict what these individuals look like today, but both approaches have flaws. Read full Article
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