The New Zealand Herald

Google to give away US$25m to fund more humane AI projects

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Google will give away US$25 million ($38.2m) to projects that propose ways to use the artificial intelligen­ce of computers to help create a more humane society.

The grant program announced this week is part of a broader Google initiative called “AI for Social Good” that aims to ease concerns that advances in artificial intelligen­ce will eliminate jobs and perhaps even be autonomous­ly deployed by militaries to kill people.

Other technology companies have taken similar steps to address ethical issues in AI.

For instance, Microsoft has committed US$115m to an “AI for Good” initiative that provides grants to organisati­ons harnessing AI for humanitari­an, accessibil­ity and environmen­tal projects.

During a presentati­on in Sunnyvale, California, Google demonstrat­ed how its AI technology is already being used to diagnose diseases, help people with disabiliti­es, predict areas likely to flood, and protect endangered species.

Despite commitment­s like those being made by Google and Microsoft, the spectre of AI going horribly awry lingers.

Even as it pledges to do good things with AI, Microsoft is pursuing a massive US military contract that prompted an open letter earlier this month from a purported group of Microsoft employees worried the company might be betraying its own artificial intelligen­ce principles.

Microsoft reaffirmed its resolve to win the military contract in its own blog post last week, promising to address any ethical concerns that may arise if it ends up working on the project.

Google decided not to bid for the same military contract that Microsoft wants after some its own employees protested.

The company concluded the contract, potentiall­y worth US$10 billion, didn’t comply with its AI principles, which preclude the technology from being used to “cause or directly facilitate injury to people”.

The company’s AI For Social Good program was already in the works before Google employees raised objections about the military contract, said Jeff Dean, a senior fellow overseeing AI.

Google’s non-profit arm will announce the winners of its AI grants next year at an annual company conference.

 ?? Photo / 123RF ??
Photo / 123RF

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