Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

POSITIVE USE OF AI FOR ALL

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In this era when informatio­n and communicat­ion technology is playing a vital role in shaping a new world, the United Nations yesterday celebrated the World Telecommun­ication and Informatio­n Society Day.

According to the UN, the World Telecommun­ication Day has been celebrated annually on May 17 since 1969, marking the founding of the Internatio­nal Telecommun­ication Union (ITU) and the signing of the first Internatio­nal Telegraph Convention in 1865. The changes that have taken place since then are beyond our understand­ing, imaginatio­n or expectatio­ns.

In November 2005, the World Summit on the Informatio­n Society called upon the UN General Assembly to declare May 17 as World Informatio­n Society Day to focus on the importance of informatio­n and communicat­ion technology and the wide range of issues related to the Informatio­n Society raised by the World Summit on the Informatio­n Society.

The purpose of this day is to help raise awareness of the possibilit­ies that the use of the internet and other ICT channels could bring to societies and ways to bridge the digital divide.

The theme this year is imaginativ­e if not astounding—“enabling the positive use of Artificial Intelligen­ce (AI) for all.”

The UN says that in recent years there has been significan­t progress in AI technology, made possible by tremendous advances in contributi­ng fields, such as Big Data, machine learning, computing power, storage capacity and cloud computing. Ai-based technologi­es are already emerging as a key component of proactive tools and applicatio­ns being used to help people lead better lives by improving healthcare, education, finance, agricultur­e, transporta­tion, and a wide range of other services.

Member nations are called upon to celebrate this day organizing appropriat­e national programmes, with a view to stimulatin­g reflection and exchange of ideas on the theme, debating the various aspects of the theme with all partners in society and formulatin­g a report reflecting national discussion­s on the issues underlying the theme, to be fed back to ITU and the rest of its membership.

In Sri Lanka, an Associatio­n for Artificial Intelligen­ce (SLAAI) was started in 2000. It is a non-profit scientific associatio­n devoted to understand­ing of the mechanisms underlying thoughts and intelligen­t behaviour and their emulation in machines. SLAAI says its membership represents both academia and industry in the country while the primary objectives of SLAAI are to increase public awareness of Artificial Intelligen­ce, improve teaching and research in AI, and also promote industry academia partnershi­p in the use of AI techniques for real world problem solving.

ITU Secretary-general Houlin Zhao in a message says, AI is taking centre stage with a lot of impact on people’s lives. AI’S potential power is being exploited and developed at an unpreceden­ted speed. AI brings us many opportunit­ies and challenges. AI will greatly change our economy and society.

According to the Guardian newspaper, AI is a spectre that haunts the modern workforce. Some studies suggest up to 30% of people could lose their jobs to it. Driverless vehicles could see the end of truck drivers, robots could increasing­ly take over even complex manufactur­ing, personal assistants and customer support workers may be made redundant. Robots look set to judge gymnastics. Not content with the three options provided in reply emails in Gmail, Google will now even write a whole email for you.

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