What is the future of AI? Some say it is bright and shiny, others see a dark dystopia. But who is really right or wrong and how can we tell the difference? There is so much noise in the media that the reader easily gets lost. I get lost too, because I apply emotion and personal bias.
To help myself, I decided to let a machine do it for me (how ironic). I trained one of our text classifiers to distinguish betwen three categories (concerned, curious, and excited) and let it get fed with the latest content on AI that appears online. The result is the constantly updated list you will see below. The model is not perfect, but is slowly getting better, as I train it with more and more data.
For feedback and suggestions, feel free to get in touch on Mastodon and Twitter.
1139d ago | scientificamerican.com
1138d ago | diginomica.com
1137d ago | techcrunch.com
1135d ago | techcrunch.com
1140d ago | 3quarksdaily.com
1138d ago | conservativehome.com
1138d ago | techcrunch.com
1135d ago | treycausey.com
1138d ago | techcrunch.com
1138d ago | techcrunch.com
1139d ago | medium.com
1139d ago | niemanlab.org
1135d ago | github.blog
1138d ago | techcrunch.com
1139d ago | techcrunch.com
1137d ago | macstories.net
1139d ago | techcrunch.com
1138d ago | techcrunch.com
1135d ago | futurism.com
1137d ago | 512pixels.net
1136d ago | ycombinator.com
1138d ago | techcrunch.com