Artificial intelligence promises to improve decision making in corporates, it will increase automation, and improve quality of life. At the same time AI will suffer from human biases and our inability to properly model the world. This leads to risks that we need to be aware if we want to better design AI systems.
22. Conclusions
• Understand where and how we are biased
• Understand our limitations in modelling the world
• Provide algorithmic transparency and algorithmic
accountability
• Develop legislation and regulation
Musk says the global race for artificial intelligence will cause World War III and that governments will take AI technology "at gunpoint" if necessary. The billionaire tech icon has also says robots will be able to do everything better than humans. And "AI is a fundamental risk to the existence of human civilization" and poses "vastly more risk" than North Korea, according to Musk.
Talk about Iron first
Average Hospital produces more 665TB of Data
INSULINE-PUMP , PACE-MAKERS
Jay Radcliffe made headlines in 2011 by showing a hackers’ convention how he could exploit a vulnerability in his insulin pump that might enable an attacker to manipulate the amount of insulin pumped to produce a potentially fatal reaction. Now he talks about going without a pump to raise awareness about the potential for security lapses and the need for better engineering.
In the real world, he said, a hacker is more likely interested in stealing records he can sell than in harming a patient. “There are not that many bad… guys whose goal in life is to go and randomly mess with patients in hospitals,” Hoyme said. “They want money, not to shut off the ventilator of a particular patient.”
Hospitals are targets because they collect so much data, from patients’ Social Security numbers and financial information, to diagnosis codes and health-insurance policy numbers. Radcliffe estimates that medical identity information is worth 10 times more than credit-card information—about $5 to $10 per record on the black market, compared to 50 cents per account for credit-card information.
BABY-MONITORS (2016)
Parents are being warned that a growing number of people are hacking baby monitors and talking to children as they sleep.
SMART-FRIDGE (2015):
Update Security researchers have discovered a potential way to steal users’ Gmail credentials from a Samsung smart fridge.
Pen Test Partners discovered the MiTM (man-in-the-middle) vulnerability that facilitated the exploit during an IoT hacking challenge at the recent DEF CON hacking conference.
The hack was pulled off against the RF28HMELBSR smart fridge, part of Samsung’s line-up of Smart Home appliances which can be controlled via their Smart Home app. While the fridge implements SSL, it fails to validate SSL certificates, thereby enabling man-in-the-middle attacks against most connections.
The internet-connected device is designed to download Gmail Calendar information to an on-screen display. Security shortcomings mean that hackers who manage to jump on to the same network can potentially steal Google login credentials from their neighbours.
BMW Supply Chain
http://www.cbronline.com/news/big-data/analytics/bmw-optimised-supply-chain-teradata-big-data/
http://bigdata-madesimple.com/11-interesting-big-data-case-studies-in-telecom/