وصف الكتاب | The book "The Human Algorithm: How Artificial Intelligence Redefines Who We Are" deals with robotics, programs and computers that have the ability to "intelligent behavior", or what is known as "interactive" machines that are developed to imitate human behavior, or the ability to carry out human tasks. . The book questions: Does artificial intelligence have ideas? If the robot is an intelligent inanimate object and can think on its own, does this mean that it can have cognitive abilities such as understanding, memory, decision and logical thinking? Then what about the ability to sense, feelings, such as joy and anger, and other experiences shared by living things that we associate with intelligence? Some assume that all organisms are just algorithms: Does this perception mean that life can actually be designed by artificially copying nature? Author Flynn Coleman answers in this book about the most important developments of the artificial intelligence revolution, and the impact of smart machines on all living organisms, and shows how this revolution will transform individuals, states and companies into defining who we are and how the condition of humanity will be like that will change in ways we do not expect! The author: “Many of us are deliberately ignorant of how artificial intelligence algorithms influenced our decisions before, or how we are now partly in imaginary worlds. Whether you decide which shoes to buy, which friends to“ befriend, ”or who you vote for, there is an algorithm involved. In the process. When an insurance company determines your premiums, when someone is placed on the “no-travel” list, there is an algorithm involved in the process.Today there is an algorithm that can predict your sexual orientation with amazing accuracy (better than humans) by looking at a picture of your face. . As we accept Google ads and Netflix recommendations, which seem harmless to many of us, do we pay attention to how well machine intelligence is influencing the 35,000 "remote conscious" decisions that you and every adult take every day? I don't think we're paying attention. Nor are our elected leaders paying attention, we are not fully prepared for the short-term impact of this smart technology and its consequences. And, as I will argue in this book, despite the emerging and well-intentioned "algorithmic responsibility movement", we are frighteningly unprepared for the reality of robust AI that draws conclusions and makes decisions without human intervention. If we do not intentionally intervene, AI will not develop an algorithm that assesses human concerns. |