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| |title=PRIMO.ai | | |title=PRIMO.ai |
| |titlemode=append | | |titlemode=append |
− | |keywords=artificial, intelligence, machine, learning, models, algorithms, data, singularity, moonshot, Tensorflow, Google, Nvidia, Microsoft, Azure, Amazon, AWS | + | |keywords=artificial, intelligence, machine, learning, models, algorithms, data, singularity, moonshot, TensorFlow, Google, Nvidia, Microsoft, Azure, Amazon, AWS, Facebook |
| |description=Helpful resources for your journey with artificial intelligence; videos, articles, techniques, courses, profiles, and tools | | |description=Helpful resources for your journey with artificial intelligence; videos, articles, techniques, courses, profiles, and tools |
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| <youtube>PazlKN_FuWQ</youtube> | | <youtube>PazlKN_FuWQ</youtube> |
| <b>The Rise of the Weaponized AI Propaganda Machine by Berit Anderson | | <b>The Rise of the Weaponized AI Propaganda Machine by Berit Anderson |
− | </b><br>Silicon Valley spent the last 10 years building digital addiction machines. And during the 2016 U.S. Election, Russia, Trump and their allies hijacked them. All across Europe, elections have been targeted by Russian propagandists determined to aggravate underlying cultural divides. Alt-right data & AI strategists at Cambridge Analytica are targeting democracies in India, Australia, Kenya, and South America. As platforms struggle to determine their role in the new emerging world order, our biggest strategic advantage as technologists has become fluency in three areas: The motivations and behavior of the international actors at play, a systems understanding of the political and economic drivers of technology, and a deep focus on how to protect the tools that we build every day. Berit Anderson is the CEO and Editor-in-Chief of Scout.ai, which creates media to help you anticipate the impacts of technology. She frequently speaks about her work on Weaponized AI Propaganda and its impact on international democracy. In 2017 she won a debate with the former prime minister of Sweden about whether the internet is a force for democracy. | + | </b><br>Silicon Valley spent the last 10 years building digital addiction machines. And during the 2016 U.S. Election, [[Government Services#Russia|Russia]], Trump and their allies hijacked them. All across Europe, elections have been targeted by [[Government Services#Russia|Russian]] propagandists determined to aggravate underlying cultural divides. Alt-right data & AI strategists at Cambridge Analytica are targeting democracies in India, Australia, Kenya, and South America. As platforms struggle to determine their role in the new emerging world order, our biggest strategic advantage as technologists has become fluency in three areas: The motivations and behavior of the international actors at play, a systems understanding of the political and economic drivers of technology, and a deep focus on how to protect the tools that we build every day. Berit Anderson is the CEO and Editor-in-Chief of Scout.ai, which creates media to help you anticipate the impacts of technology. She frequently speaks about her work on Weaponized AI Propaganda and its impact on international democracy. In 2017 she won a debate with the former prime minister of Sweden about whether the internet is a force for democracy. |
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| Matthew Holmes, Cybersecurity Student, UC Berkeley | | Matthew Holmes, Cybersecurity Student, UC Berkeley |
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− | What we have learned from the US 2016 election interfered by Russian. This session will inspect the inference threats on how elections in the international community interfered by inference threats. The session will also analyze the patterns of disinformation and misinformation used in the past elections and how artificial intelligence might be applied to influence the outcome of the 2020 election.Pre-Requisites: Understanding of Data [[Privacy]] Engineering concepts and general information technology background interested in inference threats. | + | What we have learned from the US 2016 election interfered by [[Government Services#Russia|Russian]]. This session will inspect the inference threats on how elections in the international community interfered by inference threats. The session will also analyze the patterns of disinformation and misinformation used in the past elections and how artificial intelligence might be applied to influence the outcome of the 2020 election.Pre-Requisites: Understanding of Data [[Privacy]] Engineering concepts and general information technology background interested in inference threats. |
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