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We are fascinated by machines that can control cars, compose symphonies, or defeat people at chess, Go, or Jeopardy! While more progress is being made all the time in Artificial Intelligence (AI), some scientists and philosophers warn of the dangers of an uncontrollable superintelligent AI. Using theoretical calculations, an international team of researchers, including scientists from the Center for Humans and Machines at the Max Planck Institute for Human Development, shows that it would not be possible to control a superintelligent AI. The study was published in the
Journal of Artificial Intelligence Research.
Suppose someone were to program an AI system with intelligence superior to that of humans, so it could learn independently. Connected to the Internet, the AI may have access to all the data of humanity. It could replace all existing programs and take control all machines online worldwide. Would this produce a utopia or a dystopia? Would the AI cure cancer, bring
Throughout the history of science as we know it there have been those who have pushed beyond the boundaries of the known and the accepted. These are very often the people who have expanded our horizons as a species, and led the way through the darkness of more primitive beliefs. Yet although these pioneers and groundbreakers have pushed forward our knowledge, there have been perhaps just as many who have derailed to careen off into darker and more mysterious and perilous realms. These are the ones who have cast a strobe light upon knowledge that we maybe should not know or are not even meant to know, and one of these must surely be the Spanish scientist who opened the doors to the domain of mind control with his weird and frightening experiments.
Microplastics Found In Antarctica’s Freshwater For First Time
Microplastics Found In Antarctica’s Freshwater For First Time
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BYERS PENINSULA, Antarctica A team of Spanish researchers has detected microplastics in freshwater in Antarctica, indicating the particles are spreading to places virtually untouched by man.
The recent investigation, led by scientists from the Autonomous University of Madrid and Alcala University, confirmed the presence of polyester, acrylic and Teflon in the glacier-fed waters of the Byers Peninsula on Livingston Island.
“This area is a protected area since 1966, and only scientists are allowed to go there and only after filing a lot of paperwork,” Roberto Rosal Garcia, a professor at the University of Alcala, told Zenger News in an exclusive interview.