Global stocks sank Wednesday after US President Donald Trump said he was not satisfied with talks that are aimed at averting a trade war with China. Equities were also dented by poor eurozone economic data, and as Trump cast doubt on a planned summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un. “Trump (is) continuing to drive uncertainty over global trade,” said analyst Joshua Mahony at trading firm IG. “European markets are following their Asian counterparts lower, as a pessimistic tone from Trump is compounded by downbeat economic data,” he added. Markets had surged Monday after US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and Chinese Vice Premier Liu He said they had agreed to pull back from imposing threatened tariffs on billions of dollars of goods, and continue talks on a variety of trade issues. However, Trump has declared that he was “not satisfied” with the status of the talks, fuelling worries that the world’s top two economies could still slug out an economically pain...
It is no longer news that robot has play an important role in our societal ecosystem today,and it has been more popular by the days goes by.
Building a robot, OpenAI’s leadership explains in a blog entry on Monday, is a good way to test and refine a machine's ability to learn how to perform common tasks. By “build,” the company means taking a current off-the-shelf robot and customizing it to do housework.
“More generally, robotics is a good test bed for many challenges in AI,” reads the blog entry.
The mission of OpenAI is to research AI and other machine-learning technologies with an eye toward making sure that the robots don’t one day go rogue and destroy humanity.
When OpenAI launched in December 2015, it secured $1 billion in funding from a who’s who in tech, including Altman and Musk as well as Silicon Valley luminaries like Jessica Livingston and PayPal cofounder Peter Thiel.
Apart from robotics, OpenAI says that its other big ambitions are around chatbots, or “intelligent agents” that can talk to you in plain natural speech. You know, kind of like on Facebook Messenger.
One of OpenAI’s goals is to build a chatbot agent that can go beyond simple tasks like looking up movie times or doing simple translation tasks, and up to holding a conversation or truly understanding a document or even the ability to ask clarifying questions if it doesn't understand something.
OpenAI also says that it’s been inspired by the work of Google’s DeepMind, which beat world champions at the game of Go. To that end, OpenAI wants to build intelligent agents that can conquer games.
“Games are virtual mini-worlds that are very diverse, and learning to play games quickly and well will require significant advances in generative models and reinforcement learning,” OpenAI writes.
And while this isn’t as flashy as the others, OpenAI says that its first priority is to measure its success with a common set of criteria that can be applied to all of these robots and chatbot agents. OpenAI says that it's working on a “living metric” to measure intelligence, no matter what kind of test the AI is undergoing.
Musk and Altman are wary of the power of artificial intelligence. Musk, in particular, thinks that sci-fi visions of a world overrun by robots are actually within reason, while serial investor Altman once said that “AI will probably most likely lead to the end of the world, but in the meantime, there’ll be great companies.”
As a nonprofit, OpenAI isn’t committed to releasing commercial products soon, if ever. Still, with this many entrepreneurial types behind it, it would be more surprising if, say, Tesla didn’t end up taking some OpenAI robot designs and building them for real.
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