Digital Discourse Database

Number of Posts: 100
Posts 91 - 100

Chatbot that overturned 160,000 parking fines now helping refugees claim asylum

Hyperlink

Newspaper | The Guardian
Date | 6.3.2017
Language | English
Country | UK
Topic Tags | artificial intelligence, Facebook, law, WhatsApp
Summary | A Stanford student has developed a chatbot on Facebook messenger that helps refugees apply for asylum in the US, UK, and Canada. It helps them fill out the necessary forms by using plain English and they are working on an Arabic translation. He wishes he could have the service on WhatsApp so that it would be better encrypted.
Image Description | Facebook chats on smartphones and a laptop.
Image Tags | computer/laptop, Facebook, smartphone

Tackling abuse on social media is a monumental task - but billion dollar companies should be up to it

Hyperlink

Newspaper | Telegraph
Date | 15.3.2017
Language | English
Country | UK
Topic Tags | artificial intelligence, cyberbullying, law, social media, threat
Summary | Social media have a huge problem with trolling, cyberbullying, and sharing of criminal content. It is however extremely difficult for providers to find such content before it is reported or seen by many. Especially in verbal abuse, the line between joking and slander is blurred and human language is too messy to be able to flag down such instances with algorhythms.
Image Description | Getty image of the Facebook logo on a hand-held smartphone and a laptop and a photograph of a screen showing the Twitter logo.
Image Tags | Facebook, hand(s), logo, Twitter

How Artificial Intelligence Is Helping The Visually Impaired

Hyperlink

Newspaper | Huffington Post
Date | 11.4.2017
Language | English
Country | U.S.
Topic Tags | (mental) health, artificial intelligence
Summary | The discourse around artificial intelligence is usually centered around how it will make tons of jobs obsolete. What few people think about however, is the tremendous potential artificial intelligence has to improve the life of visually impaired or blind people. The same technology that is being developed to operate self-driving cars can be used to help visually impaired people read or recognize people on the street by face recognition cameras.
Image Description | Person using AI camera to read and photograph of interviewee.
Image Tags | male(s)

Chat mit einem Untoten: "Ich vermisse dich auch"

(Chat with an undead: "I miss you too")

Hyperlink

Newspaper | Spiegel Online
Date | 29.1.2017
Language | German
Country | Germany
Topic Tags | artificial intelligence, Facebook
Summary | A Russian programmer has made a deceased friend of hers into an artificial intelligence robot. She used all their numerous Facebook conversations to feed the robot so that it could learn his manneurisms. The toughest part is to teach a computer how to understand all non-literal meaninings we casually use while communicating.
Image Description | Image of the programmer and her friend.
Image Tags | female(s), male(s)

Wie lebt es sich mit Asisstentin? Alexa im Selbsttest

(How is life with an assistant? Testing Alexa)

Hyperlink

Newspaper | Welt
Date | 20.3.2017
Language | German
Country | Germany
Topic Tags | artificial intelligence, privacy
Summary | Amazon's new chatbot assistant is spreading in contemporary households. Though the privacy is questionable when one has Alexa in their house, she is likeable. Alexa has cute answers to unexpected questions like "Are we friends?", "Am I cool?", and "Do you love, Alexa?". After using Alexa for a while the author begins to find movies about people falling in love with AI robots plausible...
Image Description | Bookshelf with Alexa on it.

Das ist an Messenger-Verschwörungstheorien dran

(This is the deal with messenger conspiracy theories)

Hyperlink

Newspaper | Welt
Date | 5.11.2017
Language | German
Country | Germany
Topic Tags | artificial intelligence, privacy, Snapchat, texting, threat, WhatsApp
Summary | A list of popular messengers is analyzed in terms of how well they protect their users' privacy. The safest one is Signal and many others have end-to-end encryption, for instance WhatsApp. They still collect the metadata though (interlocutors, time of interaction, location). Some even save the content that is sent around - most shockingly Snapchat which is popular becuase it supposedly leaves no trace. Some messengers supposedly have ties with national security ministries, like Telegram in Russia and Viber in Israel. Apple recently refused to work with the FBI in giving away a customer's personal information.
Image Description | Photograph of a smartphone screen with messengers and a video about messengers.
Image Tags | hand(s), logo, smartphone, WhatsApp

Die CIA an meinem Tisch

(The CIA at my table)

Hyperlink

Newspaper | Frankfurter Allgemeine
Date | 9.3.2017
Language | German
Country | Germany
Topic Tags | artificial intelligence, privacy, threat
Summary | Amazon's new Echo device - a voice command artificial intelligence client is the perfect surveillance device when you think about it. It is equipped with sophisticated microphones that can decipher voice commands from any direction even if the TV is on. It turns on once its artificial intelligence persona Alexa is called and turns off after the order is finished. Digital corporations are increasingly developing encryption for all digital transactions because otherwise users become very vulnerable to attacks from hackers and the government.
Image Description | Amazon Echo standing on a table.

Arbeitsagentur startet Berufsberatung per Whatsapp

(Employment agency starts career counseling via WhatsApp)

Hyperlink

Newspaper | Leipziger Volkszeitung
Date | 20.1.2017
Language | German
Country | Germany
Topic Tags | artificial intelligence, youth
Summary | A local employment agency is offering a chatbot service via WhatsApp to help school graduates find a suitable career path. In a series of eight multiple choice questions, students are assigned to one of four professional realms to help them navigate the broad career fields ahead of them. Student's responses to the chatbot are encouraged with short answers like "good answer!" or humorous GIFs.
Image Description | Close-up shot of the employment agency sign with a man in the background walking by.
Image Tags | male(s)

Ask Alexa? No, Hear This Alexa

Hyperlink

Newspaper | The New York Times
Date | 16.1.2017
Language | English
Country | U.S.
Topic Tags | artificial intelligence, threat
Summary | Amazon's new chatbot Alexa is constructed to make life easier for us: it is an assistant that gets you the information you need or fetches (orders) groceries for you. You can operated without hands by simply calling "Alexa" and the microphone and speaker station will 'wake up' to follow your instruction. But while the artificial intelligence bot learns to be more humanoid from us, we are likely to lose human interactional abilities if we start speaking with robots on regular basis.
Image Description | Image of the Echo devices (microphone and speaker station for Alexa) in a storage unit.
Image Tags | speaker

Mattel's Aristotle is like an Amazon Echo for kids

Hyperlink

Newspaper | USA Today
Date | 3.1.2017
Language | English
Country | U.S.
Topic Tags | artificial intelligence, childhood, digitized education, privacy
Summary | A new baby monitor by Mattel is enhanced with various affordances we know from chatbots: the monitor starts a lullaby when the baby wakes up or plays with older children, teaching them colors by asking them to name what color light they see or learning a new language and so on. The monitor called Aristotle reports all these things to the parents by means of smartphone notifications and also gives them suggestions on where to stock up on diapers. The developers are emphasize their high standards for child privacy security.
Image Description | Video about CES 2017 conference in Las Vegas.

Page 10 of 10
Back | Next