Thinking machineb A global authority for AI research explains the unknown challenges facing humanity with the development of AI.b? The birth of a thinking machine will affect our lives in many ways. At worst, it may threaten human survival. As machines take the place of much of what humans do today, they will bring about great changes in society and the economy as a whole. The thinking machine will revolutionize every human activity from the ground up, from sharing love to conducting war, one by one. How will the development of AI affect human life in the future? The author attempts to analyze with a very critical perspective on the impact of the thinking machine on humanity.The authors, if prepared well, AI will be the last and the greatest invention ever made by humans, but it will not. Warns that if this would cause catastrophe to humanity. Is the future of thinking machines coming up in a good future? Will robots replace all the hard and dangerous things that humans do now? Will the economy develop further? Will human beings enjoy more leisure instead of less work? Will the things you draw in Hollywood movies turn into reality? Will the future be a harder world? Will the poor and the poor get worse? Will a lot of people lose their jobs and will the robots take over? Isnt human being sowing the seeds of self-destruction now?This book was written to find answers to these questions. The author tries to predict how AI will lead humanity. Evaluate the outcomes of this great advancement in the most realistic way possible. I also tried to cover the future of AI in more detail.
Toby Walsh is one of the world’s leading researchers in Artificial Intelligence. He is a Professor of Artificial Intelligence at the University of New South Wales and leads a research group at Data61, Australia’s Centre of Excellence for ICT Research. He has been elected a fellow of the Association for the Advancement of AI for his contributions to AI research, and has won the prestigious Humboldt research award. He has previously held research positions in England, Scotland, France, Germany, Italy, Ireland and Sweden.