Artificial Intelligence
Artificial Intelligence
Artificial Intelligence
Machine Learning
Machine learning is an application of artificial intelligence (AI) that provides systems the ability
to automatically learn and improve from experience without being explicitly programmed.
Machine learning focuses on the development of computer programs that can access data and use
it learn for themselves.
The process of learning begins with observations or data, such as examples, direct experience, or
instruction, in order to look for patterns in data and make better decisions in the future based on
the examples that we provide. The primary aim is to allow the computers learn automatically
without human intervention or assistance and adjust actions accordingly.
However, the technology is still in its infancy. What many companies are calling A.I. today, are
not necessarily so. As a software engineer, I can claim that any piece of software has A.I. due to
an algorithm that responds based on pre-defined multi-faceted input or user behavior. That is not
necessarily A.I.
A true artificially intelligent system is one that can learn on its own. We're talking about neural
networks from the likes of Google's DeepMind, which can make connections and reach
meanings without relying on pre-defined behavioral algorithms. True A.I. can improve on past
iterations, getting smarter and more aware, allowing it to enhance its capabilities and its
knowledge.
That type of A.I., the kind that we see in wonderful stories depicted on television through the
likes of HBO's powerful and moving series, Westworld, or Alex Garland's, Ex Machina, are still
way off. We are not talking about that. At least not yet. Today, we are talking about the pseudo-
A.I. technologies that are driving much of our voice and non-voice based interactions with the
machines -- the machine-learning phase of the Digital Age.
While companies like Apple, Facebook and Tesla rollout ground-breaking updates and
revolutionary changes to how we interact with machine-learning technology, many of us are still
clueless on just how A.I. is being used today by businesses both big and small. How much of an
effect will this technology have on our future lives and what other ways will it seep into day-to-
day life? When A.I. really blossoms, how much of an improvement will it have on the current
iterations of this so-called technology?
This will be at the hands of artificial intelligence. A.I. will also become smarter, faster, more
fluid and human-like thanks to the inevitable rise of quantum computing. Quantum computers
will not only solve all of life's most complex problems and mysteries regarding the environment,
aging, disease, war, poverty, famine, the origins of the universe and deep-space exploration, just
to name a few, it'll soon power all of our A.I. systems, acting as the brains of these super-human
machines.
However, quantum computers hold their own inherent risks. What happens after the first
quantum computer goes online, making the rest of the world's computing obsolete? How will
existing architecture be protected from the threat that these quantum computers pose?
Considering that the world lacks any formidable quantum resistant cryptography (QRC), how
will a country like the United States or Russia protect its assets from rogue nations or bad actors
that are hell bent on using quantum computers to hack the world's most secretive and lucrative
information?
In a conversation with Nigel Smart, founder of Dyadic Security and Vice President of the
International Association of Cryptologic Research, a Professor of Cryptology at the University of
Bristol and an ERC Advanced Grant holder, he tells me that quantum computers could still be
about 5 years out. However, when the first quantum computer is built, Smart tells me that:
"...all of the world's digital security is essentially broken. The internet will not be secure, as we
rely on algorithms, which are broken by quantum computers to secure our connections to web
sites, download emails and everything else. Even updates to phones and downloading
applications from App stores will be broken and unreliable. Banking transactions via chip-and-
PIN could [also] be rendered insecure (depending on exactly how the system is implemented in
each country)."
Clearly, there is no stopping a quantum computer led by a determined party without a solid QRC.
While all of it is still what seems like a far way off, the future of this technology presents a
Catch-22, able to solve the world's problems and likely to power all the A.I. systems on earth,
but also incredibly dangerous in the wrong hands.
1) https://www.nibusinessinfo.co.uk/content/examples-artificial-intelligence-use-
business
2) https://www.sas.com/en_gb/insights/articles/analytics/applications-of-artificial-
intelligence.html
3) https://www.techopedia.com/definition/190/artificial-intelligence-ai
4) https://futureoflife.org/background/benefits-risks-of-artificial-intelligence/
5) https://www.forbes.com/sites/robertadams/2017/01/10/10-powerful-examples-of-
artificial-intelligence-in-use-today/#20cf24d8420d