It’s a bumper week for government pushback on the misuse of artificial intelligence.
Today the EU released its long-awaited set of AI regulations, an early draft of which leaked last week. The regulations are wide ranging, with restrictions on mass surveillance and the use of AI to manipulate people.
But a statement of intent from the US Federal Trade Commission, outlined in a short blog post by staff lawyer Elisa Jillson on April 19, may have more teeth in the immediate future. According to the post, the FTC plans to go after companies using and selling biased algorithms. Read More
Daily Archives: April 23, 2021
Microsoft details the latest developments in machine learning at GTC 21
With the rapid pace of change taking place in AI and machine learning technology, it’s no surprise Microsoft had its usual strong presence at this year’s Nvidia GTC event.
Representatives of the company shared their latest machine learning innovations in multiple sessions, covering inferencing at scale, a new capability to train machine learning models across hybrid environments, and the debut of the new PyTorch Profiler that will help data scientists be more efficient when they’re analyzing and troubleshooting ML performance issues.
In all three cases, Microsoft has paired its own technologies, like Azure, with open source tools and NVIDIA’s GPU hardware and technologies to create these powerful new innovations. Read More
How Transformers work in deep learning and NLP: an intuitive introduction
The famous paper “Attention is all you need” in 2017 changed the way we were thinking about attention. With enough data, matrix multiplications, linear layers, and layer normalization we can perform state-of-the-art-machine-translation.
Nonetheless, 2020 was definitely the year of transformers! From natural language now they are into computer vision tasks. How did we go from attention to self-attention? Why does the transformer work so damn well? What are the critical components for its success?
Read on and find out!
A.I. reveals the hidden author of a crucial Bible text
Rescued from the dusty interior of the Qumran Caves in 1947, the Dead Sea Scrolls contain the oldest manuscripts of the Old Testament and are a crucial piece of Biblical history that dates back to the 4th century BCE.
But despite these scrolls’ status as an unmovable piece of religious history, there are still many things that scholars don’t really know about their origin. For example, who actually wrote them down?More like thisInnovation4.16.2021 9:00 AMNASA’s InSight crisis reveals the most difficult part of exploring MarsBy Dave GershgornInnovation4.18.2021 8:00 AMRobotic lawnmowers could cut a huge swath in air pollutionBy Sarah WellsInnovation4.11.2021 8:00 AMCreepy robot skin answers 3 questions about the futureBy Sarah WellsEARN REWARDS & LEARN SOMETHING NEW EVERY DAY.
Using artificial intelligence and pattern recognition, a team of paleographers (scientists who study ancient handwriting) and computer scientists from the University of Groningen have now discovered hidden details in these scrolls that point toward not just one scribe, but two original scribes.
The research was published Wednesday in the journal PLOS One. Read More
How Robust are Randomized Smoothing based Defenses to Data Poisoning?
Predictions of certifiably robust classifiers remain constant in a neighborhood of a point, making them resilient to test-time attacks with a guarantee. In this work, we present a previously unrecognized threat to robust machine learning models that highlights the importance of training-data quality in achieving high certified adversarial robustness. Specifically, we propose a novel bilevel optimization based data poisoning attack that degrades the robustness guarantees of certifiably robust classifiers. Unlike other poisoning attacks that reduce the accuracy of the poisoned models on a small set of target points, our attack reduces the average certified radius(ACR) of an entire target class in the dataset. Moreover, our attack is effective even when the victim trains the models from scratch using state-of-the-art robust training methods such as Gaussian data augmentation[8], MACER[36], and SmoothAdv[29] that achieve high certified adversarial robustness. To make the attack harder to detect, we use clean-label poisoning points with imperceptible distortions. The effectiveness of the proposed method is evaluated by poisoning MNIST and CIFAR10 datasets and training deep neural networks using previously mentioned training methods and certifying the robustness with randomized smoothing. The ACR of the target class, for models trained on generated poi-son data, can be reduced by more than 30%. Moreover, the poisoned data is transferable to models trained with different training methods and models with different architectures. Read More
5 AI tools that can think and write like humans
Never face the blank page again: These content automation tools use cutting edge natural language processing to create clean, natural writing. Writesonic, Wordsmith, AI Writer, Quill Bot, and Article Forge offer tools that can actually think and write just like humans! (Or at least they can passably get you started.) Read More