As artificial intelligence becomes more available in software for job seekers - such as resume and cover letter builders, it could level the playing field and help you get more interviews and get hired faster.
Elsewhere, look for increasingly dubious claims that new features «are AI» or «have AI elements»
as artificial intelligence becomes one of the year's tech buzzwords.
As artificial intelligence becomes increasingly advanced and more widely adopted, we'll start to see a lot of companies - big and small - turning to AI in order to come up with better data strategies and win customer adoption, and to better compete against their competition.
Not exact matches
Quebec's largest city is
becoming internationally renowned
as a research hub for
artificial intelligence.
Advanced technologies such
as automation and
artificial intelligence are
becoming more common in the workplace.
The USTR has argued that China uses a range of practices to force companies to transfer IP, and Chinese entities engage in widespread theft of U.S. trade secrets,
as it seeks to
become a leader in advanced manufacturing and
artificial intelligence.
It's a disturbing sequence — and an inaccurate portrayal of the real ethical dilemmas we will face
as programs
become capable of automating a wide range of tasks in physical and virtual realms,
artificial intelligence expert Jerry Kaplan tells Inc..
British physicist Stephen Hawking stressed his warning: mankind may
become obsolete
as a result of advancements in
artificial intelligence.
As artificial intelligence (AI) allows machines to become more like humans, will they experience similar psychological quirks such as hallucinations or depressio
As artificial intelligence (AI) allows machines to
become more like humans, will they experience similar psychological quirks such
as hallucinations or depressio
as hallucinations or depression?
We should also look into how we can best make use of the beneficial applications of robotic or
artificial intelligence advances, so
as to be able to use our freed up resources and individual potentials wisely rather than
becoming enslaved by those advances.»
I
became intrigued by this topic when
as an author with two dozen e-books on Smashwords I read founder Mark Coker's «2013 Book Publishing Industry Predictions — Indie Ebook Authors Take Charge,» Among other things, Coker noted that «If Amazon could invent a system to replace the author from the equation, they'd do that,» and went on to describe how one innovative publisher, ICON Group International has already patented a system that automatically generates non-fiction books, and he worries that
as the field of
artificial intelligence increases, «how long until novelists are disinter - mediated by machines.»
What we originally envisaged
as a discussion centred around
artificial intelligence programming in terms of companion characters in games
became a hearty chinwag about some of our favourite companions.
Tech rejecters to be «superseded» By: Emma Ryan, for: Lawyers Weekly Legal professionals who refuse to adapt to technologies such
as artificial intelligence are set to
become outdated...
In Tim Knight's recent Slaw post on the black box of
artificial intelligence, he talked about the importance of understanding the «how» of the underlying algorithms
as we
become more reliant on both their results and their predictive capabilities.
As automation and
artificial intelligence become more widespread and powerful, lawyers will gradually lose their stronghold on the industry.
This episode underscores several important issues that relate to increased reliance on robotics,
artificial intelligence and automation:
As robots, computers and software
become more ubiquitous in our everyday lives, performing tasks that used to be the sole province of humans, it's fair to wonder whether the laws and regulations designed to protect those humans are sufficient or whether new laws are necessary.
LexisNexis was recognised for its implementation of proofreading tool LexisDraft within City law firm RPC — the BLAs 2015 law firm of the year — while Berwin Leighton Paisner won the best use of technology category for its work with RAVN ACE, having
become the first law firm to sign up to the «
artificial intelligence» solution,
as revealed by Legal IT Insider on 15 September 2015.
Diligent case preparation, without question, involves thorough research of pertinent case law and legislation, but with advancing resources such
as artificial intelligence, machine learning, and content tagging, the pragmatism of preparation
becomes much more time efficient.
The potential importance of
artificial intelligence (AI) to the practice of law is
becoming more apparent by the day
as, indeed, is its potentially transformative effect on the economy
as a whole.
As artificial intelligence (AI)
becomes more prevalent and useful, most industries are looking for ways it can benefit them; law firms are lagging behind in dedicating the time and resources to make AI work for them.
The Internet is not only making it easier for non-experts to gain access to the information they need; it is driving a gradual expansion of automation from low - cost, routine professional services to more bespoke services, especially
as artificial intelligence (AI)
becomes more sophisticated (e.g., IBM Watson's applications to the healthcare and legal industries).
Today, even technology is having an impact on human resources
as artificial intelligence starts to be integrated into legal software solutions where tasks traditionally given to legal researchers and para-legal personnel are
becoming replaced by computer functionality.
For example, the utilisation of the cloud for the electronic filing of documents with the court has
become widespread in the civil courts; juries in long and paper heavy criminal trials are often provided with iPads to relieve the excessive paper burden; and
artificial intelligence has also been harnessed to ease the burden of disclosure review in complex fraud investigations such
as Rolls Royce [1].
Privacy is
becoming more challenging with new tech such
as artificial intelligence, quantum computing, blockchain, autonomous cars, the internet of things, drones, and government agencies recording massive amounts of data in the name of security.
As legal community we face a seismic shift in the legal sector in Switzerland and abroad; in the next years we expect a generational shift and automation and
artificial intelligence to
become irreplaceable tools in our industry.
This will
become increasingly pertinent
as technology continues its gradual shift from back - office to front - office:
artificial intelligence is currently one of the hottest topics in Big Law.
However, the commercial deployment of legal
artificial intelligence (or LAI,
as it will
become known) will still be a decade away.
Bad design and flawed programming have been the primary dangers posed by much of the computerized weaponry deployed to date, but this is rapidly changing
as computer systems with some degree of
artificial intelligence become increasingly autonomous and complex.
Metadata layered with the weaponization of other digital vectors, such
as search engine results, social media, banner placement, blogs, and bots infused with machine learning and
artificial intelligence, can introduce, mutate, and expand memes and conversations out of thin air that can instantaneously
become part of the mainstream narrative.
Mr. Musk has often urged people to be cautious of embracing technology such
as artificial intelligence because of the consequences it might bring, once saying that it could
become so powerful it would start wars and turn people into its «house cats.»
But Siri has
become smarter, and it will
become smarter
as Apple experiments with
artificial intelligence and how to apply that to its voice assistant.
Paris could
become a centre for
artificial intelligence R&D,
as both Facebook and Google plan to increase AI budgets in the French capital.
The news comes
as the smart home market
becomes increasingly intertwined with cloud services and
artificial intelligence - powered products.
In view of a world where «
artificial intelligence will be everywhere, like electricity,»
as Villani has said,
becoming a leader in the field is critical for France.
As artificial intelligence makes agents and bots more autonomous, and reinforcement learning makes them more unpredictable, the need to constrain and capture their actions for training, auditing, and compliance
becomes more urgent.
As technology evolves,
artificial intelligence is quickly
becoming mainstream in the recruiting world.