On the Front Lines of AI - A Special EmTech MIT Preview, 2024

On the Front Lines of AI - A Special EmTech MIT Preview, 2024

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It's emerging. Do you hear it? Do  you feel it? Technically.   The trustworthy journalism required  to make technology a greater force   for good is here. It's always  been, and it has barely begun.   Hello, and welcome, and thank you for joining  us today for this special preview session   for our flagship event, M -TECH MIT. I'm Niall Firth, I'm MIT Technology Review's   Executive Editor, based here in London. And  with me today on the call is my colleague James   O 'Donnell, our AI hardware reporter based  in Boston. Hi James, how you doing?   Good, good, thanks. Thank you for having me.  

So what is EMTECH MIT, you might be asking.  If you don't know, it's for about more than 20   years. We've been running it as our  main event for place for discussions on   emerging trends and technologies really  before they hit the side guys.   So we have our experts from all different  places, businesses, talking about the issues,   breakthroughs, and applications for technology  in their business. The next one is going to be   held at the MIT Media Lab on September 13th,  October 1st, two consecutive days.  

And the agenda is going to be focused on two of  the biggest topics in tech right now. That's AI,   obviously, surprise, surprise, and climate  tech. James and I are going to be covering a   lot of the AI sessions over those two days. So we thought it'd be fun to give you a little  

teaser of some of the biggest topics, themes,  tell you about a couple of the speakers we've   got lined up, just to give you a feel for  what it's going to be like on the days.   So we're calling this session front lines of  change because what it really means is we're going   to be introducing you to some industry leaders who  are already working through some of the gnarliest   issues, problems, challenges that probably many  of you who will be attending will be grappling   with in the coming months and years. Do you give a chance to pick up some tips,   tactics, maybe learn some new approaches for  your own business or your life? So before we   start today's chat, remember, if you've got any  questions, throw them in the chat window.  

I'll try to get to as many as I can during  the call. Right. Let's get into it. James,   hello. What are you thinking about ahead  of the event? What's on your mind and   what are you excited about coming up? Yeah, sure thing. I think top of mind for me   as we head into M tech, and this year in general  is definitely trust. As we think about AI, it's   obviously an election year, we've already seen  a couple cases where, you know, the trustability   of AI has really trustworthiness of AI has  really been brought into question and sort of,   you know, entered the political sphere. So you had images of Taylor Swift fans embracing  

and supporting Donald Trump, which Donald  Trump embraced on X, or other platforms.   And it turned out that many, if not all of  those images were generated by AI.   You also had Donald Trump making accusations  about crowd size, images of crowd size being   AI generated for for Kamala Harris. So even  if you put the election examples aside,   you also have the issue of AI overviews,  which Google has launched this year,   and it's sort of totally transformed how we  get information through Google search.   AI is helping to sort of filter out information,  and sometimes it does a good job of that,   and it delivers answers very efficiently.  And then as you've probably seen other  

times, it delivers bad information,  misinformation, things like that.   So the trustworthiness of AI, I think is a really  top theme for us this year. And I'm excited that   we're going to be diving into that at EmTech.  One speaker I'm particularly excited about,   her name is Yasmin Green. She heads up Jigsaw, which is a  

unit within Google that's sort of, you know, in  a way tasked to solve this problem. So Jigsaw   does a lot of work trying to make the internet a  more safe place, a more trustworthy place.   So she's going to be discussing some interesting  new research with us and some of her work in   general. So she's kind of the perfect guest  for us to sort of, you know, debrief how   AI is affecting our trust in our political  system, in the web, things like that.  

So really excited to have her  guide us through that.   And that's cool. That's very cool. I know  something you cover a lot is quantum computing.   You're keeping an eye on what's happening in that  space. And we've got companies out there at the   event that you're going to be chatting to. Tell us a bit about that.  

Yeah, quantum is in an interesting space right  now. I'm sure a lot of you have probably heard   that quantum computing is promising to do  really great things for us. And what it's   promising to do is basically compute  things faster than ever before.   So that could be really helpful  with things like drug discovery,   but also really helpful with things like training  AI models more efficiently. Obviously, it's a big  

question right now of how much computing time,  but also energy and emissions are being spent   for computing power related to AI models. So quantum computing is promising to change a   lot of that. The problem is that it's also still  in its infancy. So people have been working on   it for decades. And when I talk to experts  in the quantum computing realm, they say,   that's just how the process is going to be. We'll get there eventually. They say it's   inevitable that we'll start to shift towards  that way of computing. But it's kind of a   slog to get there, really expensive to  research. And a lot of companies are  

trying to do this in incremental stages. They're building really small quantum computers,   which is good to demonstrate the technology. But  it's actually not very useful right now. They're   kind of too small to do anything useful, certainly  not something as complicated as discovering a   new drug or antibiotic or things like that,  which requires millions of computations.  

So one company I'm excited to chat with at EmTech,  they're called CyQuantum. They're taking a bit   of a different approach. So instead of trying to  build incremental small computers, they actually   kind of have this moonshot vision that, you know,  we're not going to really build one until we can   build it large enough that it can be useful. So they're testing out different components and  

chips to sort of get there. And they are  actually working in the state of Illinois   to build sort of the largest quantum  supercomputer campus right now.   They have their goal set of building that  sometime in the next 10 years. They're also   working in Australia, I believe, with a lot  of quantum computing experiments there. So  

that'll be an interesting lesson in sort of what  it's like to toil away at a problem that's many   years away from coming to fruition, but kind of  requires that incremental step to get there.   So they will be there and really  excited to chat with them.   Very cool. I just want to say I've heard that  there's some problems with my connection on   the feed. So really, sorry about that.  If I'm looking kind of weird and glitchy.   You know, we are working on it to  see what happens with that.   And tell us to give us one more. Give us  one more that you're looking at the event,  

apart from competing. Sure. So it's not strictly AI   related. But in a way it is, I suppose. So we're  going to be talking to a company called Synchron,   which if you haven't heard of them, they  are sort of a competitor to Neuralink.   So they make brain interfaces for people with  all sorts of mobility issues or disabilities. So  

that can be, you know, something like Parkinson's  all the way up to paralysis, things like that. So   they help people sort of interact with their  environment or with screens, with computers,   if they are not physically able to. And we're going to be chatting with them.   It's a really interesting field. It's obviously  also kind of in its infancy and very heavily  

regulated. It takes a lot to get these sort  of devices even to the trial stage.   So from my understanding Synchron right now  has about six patients with devices that   compares to Neuralink, I think either has one  or two, I have to have to check on that. But,   you know, in its very early stages of getting  FDA approval to actually get these patients,   these devices implanted in patients. One thing that's sort of unique about Synchron is   it requires supposedly a less invasive procedure  than Neuralink. So Neuralink is a full on implant,   whereas Synchron actually goes into a  vein near the brain understanding.  

And it can be implanted a little bit less  invasively with some of the same characteristics.   So I'm excited to talk to their CEO, Ricky  Banerjee, about what it's like to sort of develop   these another type of moonshot technology that's  set to have some real impact for people.   So that's one side of the conversation.  But something else I'm excited to chat   with her about is what it's like to share a  space with Elon Musk, who is obviously, you know,   very dominant in the media cycle right now. And so it'll be interesting to hear her thoughts   on sort of the ups and downs of having someone  like that bring so much attention to the field   to this technology that people are still sort of  getting to know, but also what it's like to have   him as a major competitor. So that'll be a really  

interesting conversation. Yeah, yeah, I mean that's something I   wonder, I've had many people in the public can't  name any other rocket companies apart from SpaceX.   If you're competing in the space, someone with  that massive social presence, that's huge PR   presence, like how do you get anything? Yeah.  

Done. Okay, let me tell you about what I'm excited  about. I've still got a few under wraps for now,   but I'll tell you about a few that I'm  really looking forward to. One of the topics,   marketing, generative AI and marketing, is  this something that is going on right now,   but not quite sure in what forms. I'm speaking to Rebecca Sykes,   who's from the BrandTech group, and they  have lots of sub -brands beneath them,   and they've got various different ways  they're using generative AI. People, creators,   are using to create their own ad campaigns. It comes up with copy images, the whole thing,   all in one go, and it propagates out, and  she's probably going to come out there. One  

of the dangers being if you don't really  know who you are and what you stand for,   and you're suddenly propagating a  generative AI campaign based on that,   it's going to come out really woolly. There's one thing I was like, and that is the   idea of having generative AI models being  a new audience for your brand. So the idea   being that you are focusing your multi  -AI models think about your brand.   It sounds like weird. It sounds like something  doesn't really make sense intuitively,  

but actually it thinks so much now as proxies for  other things. If you're using Gemini via search,   it's based on the large language model,  Llama from Meta via social.   The idea is get your brand and see if it comes  back to the things that you think of that are   important for your brand. If you make an  energy drink and you really want the brand   to be associated with your expertise,  feel it into various language models,   and that's not what comes back. They come up with techniques to try and then tweak   it by maybe doing a series of YouTube videos  that can then feed into the model to try and   get your brand ranking for that kind of stuff. So  it's kind of like a new version of stuff.  

I'm really looking forward to chatting to her  about that. Then what else have I got? I've   also got, I'm speaking to someone from FedEx.  We'll be talking about how it's a supply chain,   that kind of thing, how they're sort of doing the  last mile problem with autonomous robots.  

In your reporting, I'm looking at how sharing to  AI is sort of super charging how we train robots   to do things. That's right, isn't it? Yeah. So we're in a really interesting time   for robotics. I think for a long time,  people felt like, you know, we've been   seeing videos of crazy robots for years, but  they haven't really, you know, made an impact,   especially in the home, you know, most of us  probably, if we have a Roomba for a long time,   that's probably been the most complicated robot  that we interact with on a daily basis.   That is, unless you live in one of the cities with  robotaxis, which has obviously gotten a lot more   common this year, San Francisco, cities in Texas,  there's some other pilot cities, but for the most   part, robots were kind of slow to develop. And then AI started to really change, especially  

in the last year or so how roboticists were able  to train robots. So instead of coding them to do   one specific task in a laboratory, you know, move  this tennis ball over here, or pick this box up   and put it on this palette, instead of having  to sort of manually code all of those tasks,   people were getting really good at just feeding in  data of example tasks and having the robot sort of   learn how to do those tasks themselves. So if you were to, it's called, one method of   doing that is called teleoperation, where you  basically have a human manipulate the robot to,   let's say, you know, wash something  off of a dish using a sponge, you   maybe coach the robot how to wash 80 dishes. And if you coach the robot how to wash 80 dishes,   that might be all it takes for them to be able  to wash any dish that looks vaguely similar to   the ones that you taught them on. So just  like large language models that can be fed,  

you know, a corpus of text, and then be learned,  be trained how to sort of generate sentences and   predict the next word in a given sentence. You can pretty much do the same for robots, it   turns out, where you can train them with existing  data. And so that over the last year or so has   made some really explosive impacts in robotics,  not so much in home robotics still, I mean, that's   that's a field that's sort of coming up. But we're still a ways away from having robots   sort of do menial housework for us. But in terms  of commercial robots, people may have seen lots   of videos from figure AI and Elon Musk's Optimus  robots and various different humanoid companies   that are getting, you know, many billions  of dollars of investment right now.   And a lot of that investment in humanoids is  happening because AI is making it easier for us   to train these robots. So we're putting together  some really great sessions for M tech to sort of  

walk people through how those changes are  probably going to happen, you know, what   jobs are going to be affected first, what sort of  industries are going to be affected first.   But I can safely say that this year is, you  know, things are changing by the month I can't,   it's hard for me to even keep up with all  the robot news that's coming out.   Yeah, it's good, it keeps you busy. I've got a  question from Shantanu about whether there be   an issue with intellectual property rights,  with AI and tech advancement. And actually,  

that is something we write about a  lot, something we cover a lot.   One of the people I'm going to be  speaking to, really excited about,   is a company called Story Protocol. And they  are like absolutely red hot right now. That   if anyone who's on the call will have seen  over the last week, they just raised absolute   ton more money in a Series B round, valuing  them something north of $2 billion now.   So, but they're basically a blockchain company  for, to protect the IP of creators. So,   and I've got my hands up here as a massive  disclaimer, having sort of knocking around   tech reporting for about 20 years. I've been through a lot of blockchain stuff and   I've like definitely edged towards the skeptical  side of things, waiting for the blockchain   to become the thing that's going to replace  something and it never seems to happen.  

But something's been happening in the last, last  couple of years called smart contracts. And we've   covered that a little bit at MIT Technology  Review. These are basically contracts that are   embedded in the blockchain that execute  when certain conditions are met.   I think that's when it has starting to get a lot  more interesting. So basically, sort of protocol   has got this, this system where they embed smart  contracts in and you put your IP in there, whether   it's like, you know, your images, if you're an  artist or if you're a publisher or your work,   and you set it up a smart contract that says,  people can use it for these different purposes   if they pay this amount of money. So people can license it to remix it,  

republish it or for general generative AI  models to train on it. They can then pay   directly using the smart contract without any  lawyers or lawsuits or middlemen involved.   And it kind of thing is meant to happen  all seamlessly. And it's part of this,  

it's part of this bigger topic that we've sort of,  we've written about a lot about sort of the sort   of fight back between creators and the big tech  companies who are kind of using these balls to   suck up all of this, all this artistic work. And I think it's kind of an interesting solution   to the problem. It comes out from a different  way that we've done it in the past. We've   covered it a lot from like the artists side,  you know, a thing called glaze where you can   put it on your work to stop people scraping it  or Nightshade, our colleague Melissa has covered,   which is where you sort of poison your work. So it completely messes up a model that tries to   train on it. This is like a different  version of that. It's like, all right,  

I think they're going to take it anyway. So  like, how can I, how can I monetize that?   So I'm kind of interested in speaking to their co  -founder, going to dig into what that means.   Yeah, that can I add one more just a little  bit to that? It's interesting you bring that   up because I had an interview yesterday with a  VP from Amazon and we were talking a lot about   You know the issue of explainability how  much can you get a model to actually tell   you what it's doing under the hood? And that is actually really important. We  

were talking about with intellectual property  stuff because If you could imagine Let's say   an ai music generator, which we've we've covered  before um right now All of those generators are   being sued because they're basically producing  work That sounds a heck of a lot like the beach   boys or beyonce or or whatever, you know, take  your pick of artists And the artists are saying   that's sort of copyright infringement if  you're able to generate this thing using   ai That sounds exactly like my style. And so what I was talking with this engineer   about yesterday was is it possible? You  know in the future to have models where   the model can actually tell you Hey, this song is  actually five percent Beyonce and ten percent the   beach boys and that would probably be a  terrible song but it could actually cite,   you know What artists it's it's getting for its  inspiration and then that could lay the groundwork   for some sort of compensation system. Let's say Where if you know that your work was   used in the generation of some sort of output  whether it's a song or a poem or a book We're   getting to a point where you can actually explain  that and there might be you know Technologically   possible to have some sort of Compensation system  behind that so i'm happy you're you're going to be   exploring something related to that at mtech Yeah, yeah, I think, yeah, I think it's a really   sort of cool, sort of coming from the opposite  end of trying to fight basically the inevitable,   just seeing, you know, how can  you make money out of it.   I think I've probably got time to tell you  one more talk I'm going to be doing. I'm  

going to going to speak to Slack's new CEO, and  that's going to be really fascinating. That's on   the end of the second day, it's going to be  something like to build up to and, you know,   Slack quite recently bought by Salesforce. I think she's the third CEO in like a little over   a year or so. So there's a lot of change  on Slack that I want to find out about,   but also they're really rolling out loads of  generative AI stuff for all kinds of things.  

So like at MIT technology view and probably  lots of people watching and saying new Slack   all day long for all of our interactions at work.  And I know like I go on vacation, I come back,   I have like this like obsessive compulsion to  read every channel that I miss to see like,   you know, what stories I miss, what, you  know, what chats, what banter, what are   the jokes that I didn't, wasn't, you know, and, you know, I know you're not meant to do that,   but it's like, it's hard. There's so much to  catch up on. And I was also trying to find like,   I know I spoke to Jane O 'Donnell about  something like this about a week ago and   trying to like search through it. So they've been like rolling out these   generative AI add -ons basically, you know, things  that do like summarize discussions that you've had   with people or like a more sort of turbocharged  search for kind of certain topics, or can just   like summarize a channel while you're away. This is the kind of the general vibe that you   missed out on. But then, you know, there's,  there's lots, lots to get into there,   and especially about like how you sort of roll out  AI across a massive company and make it work for   people and also be cognizant of people's privacy  and their direct messages to each other.  

It's not being sucked up into the model.  So I think there's lots and lots of sort   of things to play with and talk about around  that sort of workplace AI in particular.   Yeah, I think we're in an interesting time for  how much appetite we have for AI systems doing   work for us in terms of how much privacy we want  to sacrifice. And I guess it just makes me think   of back when, you know, photo aggregators like  the photos apps got started to get really good at   recognizing faces and organizing your photos into,  you know, this vacation versus that one.   And at first, we may have been a little  skeeved out by these companies having   access to our photos. But if they deliver a good  enough product, you start to kind of, you know,  

give them a little bit more leeway. And I work with something like Slack, you know,   depending on how they roll these out, we'll  have a sort of similar pattern where at first   people are afraid to give Slack our messages. And  then over time, if they do a good job with it,   you start to sort of lose that fear. I'm not sure.   Right, right. OK, well, I'll tell you what,  I mean, that's kind of summary of some of   the stuff we're going to be talking about.  I know, you know, we've got other people   who are also going to be at the event. And we're going to be doing a lot of very  

cool stories between now and then. I expect  everyone to be to be reading out there. But   just a few other highlights of stuff that's  going to be there. There's an amazing session   coming up that's going to have Amy Webb, the  futurist in it, who's going to be talking   about an idea of like a tech super cycle. And how you sort of navigate that as a business   or a business leader, which is very cool. What I'm  really looking forward to, definitely going to be   like every seat packed in the house. Ray Kurzweil  is going to be there and he's a very famous   tech sort of writer and futurist as well. I suppose he talks a lot about the singularity,  

the idea of when humans and machines are going  to be melded together. He was one of the very   first to be talking about AGI, artificial general  intelligence, the very concept of which is like   pretty controversial and contested. And it's on again, so we've written a lot   about. So I can't wait to hear what he's going  to say. That's going to be total fireworks,   I imagine. And then also at the event, we're going  to be unveiling for the second year, running our  

climate tech list of 15 companies to watch. So basically, this is companies that we have   picked carefully from around the world that we  think have a chance of substantially cutting   emissions or counteracting the effects  of climate change in some way.   Some really cool names on there. Some people  will know, some that they definitely won't   know, and that's going to be unveiled live  on stage. And my colleague Amy Nordrum is  

going to tell you more about that, tell you,  James, but also you, the audience, more about   that alongside our editor -in -chief. And in a special LinkedIn live that we're   holding next month, it's called AI climate  and the new rules of business. So she'll   be talking more about AI and the climate side of  things, giving you a bit more of a teaser of what   else is coming up on our agenda. So that's coming up next month. So make   sure you're signed up for that. But I'm  afraid that is all we've got time for and   our special producer. Thank you, James, for  joining us. And thank you everyone watching  

there for coming along for the ride. If you want to know more about the event,   go visit us at mtechmit .com, that's E -M -T  -E -C -H -M -I -T .com. And keep an eye out   for your emails, because you're going to get  a special email with a special discount offer   for the event as a thank you for coming  along to see me and James chat.  

So keep an eye out for that. Thank you for  joining us and hopefully see you all at   Pentec MIT. Bye.

2024-09-01 11:01

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