The power of A.I. can reach deeper than just recommending which show to binge on Netflix. It can also be used to analyze millions of images to predict things like income, political leanings, and buying habits. Steve Lohr, Technology and Economics Reporter at The New York Times, joined us to discuss artificial intelligence's full potential when it comes to predictive analytics.
Lohr's recent piece in The New York Times highlights a Stanford study that used 50 million images from Google Street View to give a glimpse of A.I.'s ability to gather data. He explains that researchers identified 22 million cars to draw conclusions about information such as which political candidate a particular zip code favored. The project took just 2 weeks to classify all the cars. In his piece, Lohr points out that without the help of AI, it would take human experts over 15 years to accomplish that task.
This type of data collection raises concerns over privacy and issues of data access. He says most of predictive analysis has been used for commercial purposes and selling products. The use of data becomes scary when it becomes integrated into decisions such as hiring, he says, because the mistakes become more costly.
Dozens of states filed an anti-trust lawsuit against Google on Thursday, alleging that the search giant has an illegal monopoly over the online search market that hurts consumers and advertisers.
These gadgets, grooming tools, kitchen essentials, and accessories are a steal.
Robinhood Financial is agreeing to pay $65 million to settle government charges that it failed to disclose the full details of its dealing with high-speed traders and didn’t get the best prices for customers trading on its app.
Peter Szulczewski, Wish CEO and founder, talked to Cheddar about the e-commerce platform's public debut.
The price of bitcoin has risen above $20,000 for the first time, as the speculative digital currency topped its previous peak reached shortly after it became tradable on Wall Street three years ago this month.
Amazon-owned Zoox has unveiled its first self-driving robotaxi that can seat up to four passengers, has no steering wheel, can run for 16 hours on a single charge, and can travel at up to 75 miles per hour.
It was an extraordinary year for the video game industry which culminated in, of course, the big launches of the anticipated next-generation consoles, the PlayStation 5 and the Xbox Series X/S.
The Mac Bundle Ft. Parallels Pro & Luminar 4 will change the way you use your Mac, and is available at this super low price for a limited time.
Amazon-owned Zoox Inc. unveiled its four-person “robo-taxi,” a compact, multidirectional vehicle it says was designed for dense, urban environments.
Impressive gifts for everyone on your list, at a fraction of the price.
Load More