MIT Technology Review » Artificial Intelligence 2024年11月26日
Africa’s AI researchers are ready for takeoff
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本文探讨了非洲在人工智能领域的发展现状,非洲AI研究者们致力于开发满足非洲需求的AI工具,并使用当地语言,但面临着资金短缺和人才缺乏等挑战。尽管如此,他们依然坚持创新,利用开源资源,努力保护文化并塑造AI技术在非洲的应用方式。文章还提及了AI领域其他热点话题,如量子计算与AI的竞争、沙特阿拉伯的AI投资计划、AI生成内容对现实认知的影响以及AI军备竞赛等。

🌍非洲AI研究者们正努力开发满足自身需求的AI工具,并使用当地语言,以摆脱传统AI的殖民色彩,构建更具包容性的AI生态。

💰非洲AI研究面临资金短缺的巨大挑战,获得的资金远少于欧美和亚洲国家,迫使他们更加注重创新和利用开源资源。

💡非洲AI发展展现出坚持和创新的精神,致力于保护文化,并希望在AI技术应用方面拥有更多话语权,塑造AI技术在非洲的未来。

🤔文章还探讨了AI领域的其他重要议题,例如量子计算与AI的竞争、沙特阿拉伯的AI投资计划,以及AI生成内容对现实认知的影响等。

🤖AI技术在军备领域的应用也引发关注,Meta、Anthropic等公司开始向军方提供AI技术,进一步推动了AI军备竞赛。

This story originally appeared in The Algorithm, our weekly newsletter on AI. To get stories like this in your inbox first, sign up here.

When we talk about the global race for AI dominance, the conversation often focuses on tensions between the US and China, and European efforts at regulating the technology. 

But it’s high time we talked about another player: Africa.

As MIT Technology Review has written before, AI is creating a new colonial world order, where the technology is enriching a small minority of people at the expense of the rest of the world.

African AI researchers are determined to change that. They’re forging their own path, developing tools that answer the needs of Africans, in their own languages.

However, they face many barriers. AI research is eye-wateringly expensive, and African startups and researchers get a fraction as much funding as their Western or Asian counterparts. They have to innovate and rely on open-source resources to do more with less.

Despite that, the African AI story reflects not only persistence and innovation, but a determination to preserve cultures and shape how AI technologies are used on the continent. Read more here from Abdullahi Tsanni, who went to this year’s Deep Learning Indaba, a machine-learning conference held annually in Senegal, to learn about the opportunities and barriers the African AI scene faces. 

And then some personal news! This edition will be my last newsletter, and from next week you’ll be in the extremely capable hands of my colleague James O’Donnell. It’s been a delight writing this newsletter for the past two or so years, and I’m so grateful you’ve joined me on this journey covering everything from snowballs of bullshit to Taylor Swift’s deepfakes. I’m not going anywhere, though. I’ll be diving deeper into the AI beat at MIT Technology Review to bring you stories on what’s happening in AI and how the technology is changing us and our societies. Stay tuned for more! 

Finally, while I have you, this week we’re running our biggest sale of the year, with 50% off an annual subscription to MIT Technology Review. New subscribers receive a free digital report on generative AI and the future of work. Subscribe here


Now read the rest of The Algorithm

Deeper Learning

Why AI could eat quantum computing’s lunch

Tech companies have been funneling billions of dollars into quantum computers for years. The hope is that they’ll be a game changer for fields as diverse as finance, drug discovery, and logistics. Those expectations have been especially high in physics and chemistry, where the weird effects of quantum mechanics come into play. In theory, this is where quantum computers could have a huge advantage over conventional machines.

Enter AI: But while the field struggles with the realities of tricky quantum hardware, another challenger is making headway in some of these most promising use cases. AI is now being applied to fundamental physics, chemistry, and materials science in a way that suggests quantum computing’s purported home turf might not be so safe after all. 

Given the pace of recent advances, a growing number of researchers are now asking whether AI could solve a substantial chunk of the most interesting problems in chemistry and materials science before large-scale quantum computers become a reality. Read more from Edd Gent here

Bits and Bytes

The Saudis are planning a $100 billion AI powerhouse 
Speaking of the race for AI dominance, this piece looks at how Saudi Arabia wants in on AI action. And it’s putting its money where its mouth is. The country is investing a massive sum to develop a tech hub that it hopes will rival the neighboring United Arab Emirates. (Bloomberg)

AI is making it harder to believe what is real and what is not
Two recent examples show just how influential AI slop can be in warping our sense of reality. In Dublin, crowds gathered in the city center to wait for a Halloween parade to take place. There was no parade planned, but the listing was created by AI and then picked up by social media users and local media. By way of contrast, some social media users dismissed shocking images of the devastating recent floods in Spain as AI-generated, although they were entirely real. 

AI companies are getting comfortable offering their technology to the military
Militaries around the world have been pouring money into new technologies, including AI. Meta and Anthropic are the latest tech companies to start courting them, joining the likes of Google and OpenAI. (The Washington Post

OpenAI is shifting its strategy as the improvement in its AI tools slows down
The current paradigm in AI development is to make things bigger to make them better. But OpenAI’s new model, code-named Orion, only performs slightly better than its predecessors. Instead, OpenAI is shifting to improving models after their initial training. (The Information

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