Movies
written by artificial intelligence sound like an assault on human creativity, but when four people can write something as generic...
Not exact matches
One - third of all reports to Facebook's review team are generated
by artificial intelligence, he
wrote.
«The thing that I believe is going to be really incredible that's going to happen next is the ability for
artificial intelligence to
write artificial intelligence by itself,» he replies.
You don't need
artificial intelligence to
write poetry that can fool experts, even
by being «so bad it could be...
You don't need
artificial intelligence to
write poetry that can fool experts, even
by being «so bad it could be human» (15 July, p 14).
The book, Daemon, and its sequel, Freedom, both
written by Daniel Suarez, explore what would happen if an
artificial intelligence (AI) created to run an online game ends up taking over the world.
While such rhetorical explanations of the value of
writing practice have been seen as nebulous in the past, converging advances in the fields of pattern recognition
by artificial intelligence and of the cerebral physiology involved in visual pattern recognition and categorization may render them more plausible.
If you put aside Inkitt's overheated claims about
artificial intelligence, you'll find a publisher that just wants to do the
write thing: «Inkitt's goal is to remove the middle person so that a blockbuster book is never rejected
by a publishing house again.»
It packs a patented language prediction technology that uses
artificial intelligence to accurately predict words and phrases and also adapts itself to a user's personal
writing style, meaning typing speeds can be increased
by up to 50 per cent.
Hershman Leeson
wrote all of her own scripts, and she directed and produced her films as well, bringing to the screen not only her innovative computer - science fantasies — anticipating our current digitally dominated world and obsession with
artificial intelligence — but she has made documentaries as well: Strange Culture (2007) brings to bizarre life the twisted story of artist Steve Kurtz and his arrest
by the FBI for being a would - be bio-terrorist.
In fact, it has become such an important topic that late last year the Council for Society and Technology
wrote a letter to the Prime Minister advising how the UK could take advantage of opportunities created
by the increasing convergence of robotics, automation and
artificial intelligence.
Several Slaw contributors have
written recently about the use of
artificial intelligence in law (Tim Knight here, Nate Russell here) with particular reference to the program on «Computers in Legal Research» at the conference of the Canadian Association of Law Libraries held in Vancouver this past May, moderated
by Slaw's Steve Matthews.
We certainly have some
written judgments, and even databases of
written judgments, but not data sets large enough to provide adequate precision and predictive value as promised
by artificial intelligence.
Fellow Slaw columnist Omar Ha - Redeye recently
wrote a blog entry on how
artificial intelligence is making its way into the Canadian legal community more slowly that expected (
by some) due to the fact that the data repositories that are behind SOQUIJ, CanLII, and other caselaw search engines are simply too limited in size to allow for true predictive capacities.
«IP scholars have been
writing about how to treat output generated
by an
artificial intelligence for at least 30 years.»