Chaque vendredi, dans sa revue de presse, Maddyness vous propose une sélection d’articles qui ont retenu l’attention de la rédaction. Cette semaine, on s'interroge sur les robots, l'intelligence artificielle et sur le futur de l'homme par le prisme de l'éducation.
Robots are evolving so quickly that the big concern may be how much we don't know about AI
In Davos right now, the world’s best and best-performing economic minds are gathered for their annual bout of elite networking. You know you’re not invited because a ticket costs $35,000, and that’s before the cost of membership, which is also required, and even more expensive.
But we get news reports from the proceedings and the most interesting one today concerns the World Economic Forum’s recent report which claims the biggest risk in 2017 is people losing their jobs to robots. The word out of Davos is we have nothing to fear. 80% of companies that are adopting artificial intelligence have pledged that they will still retain and retrain existing staff. Lire la suite sur Business Insider
Bullshit values, actionable values: the talent.io experience
I cannot think of an organization working without rules. Take of the iconic delegates of rebellion: teenagers. When you are talking with teenagers, they almost always tell you that they stand against any embodiment of rules. “Rules are rigid. Rules are the heritage of dated way of thinking. They are the victory of tradition over legitimacy.”, they say.
Yet, however odd this might appear, there are very few organization more prone to obey to rules than teenagers. They wear the same clothes (basically you have three choices of sneakers: Stan Smith, Vans or Converse), use the same expression, watch the same movies, listen to the same music. Social pressure is moving them toward a convergence of tastes & habits. And what we call social pressure is nothing but rules. Only they are not written rules, but tacit rules. Lire la suite sur Medium
Quel Avenir pour l'éducation ?
C’est ce vaste thème qu’il m’a été donné d’aborder lors de la dernière édition de la Maddykeynote #MK17 dont l'ambition était de comprendre en quoi et comment des technologies innovantes peuvent re?pondre aux grands enjeux de demain. Bien que représentant #HPE je ne saurai résumer l'éducation à la seule transition numérique. Il convient d'évoquer également l’innovation pédagogique et la façon dont elle s'insère dans le monde qui sera le nôtre demain. Lire la suite sur la page Linkedin de Maud Samagalski
Here's why those tech billionaires are throwing millions at ethical AI
Worried about a dystopian future in which AI rule the world and humans are enslaved to autonomous technology? You're not alone. So are billionaires (kind of). First it was the Partnership on AI formed by Google, Amazon, Microsoft, Facebook and IBM. Then came Elon Musk and Peter Thiel's recent investment in $1 billion research body, OpenAI. Now, a new batch of tech founders are throwing money at ethical artificial intelligence (AI) and autonomous systems (AS). And experts say it couldn't come sooner. Lire la suite sur Mashable
Learn how to pitch your startup with Pitchbot.vc
How much traction? What’s the market size? Who else invested? Are you the target user? These are the questions every investor will ask you, so you better build a business with the right answers and get ready to recite them. That’s what Pitchbot.vc helps you practice.
Pitchbot simulates a pitch meeting with an angel, incubator, seed fund or VC firm. You respond to multiple-choice questions about your product, team, growth and values as you try to impress the investor. If your answers show you know how to build a great startup, you win a mock-up funding term sheet. Seem like a misguided wantrepreneur, and you’ll get shown the door. Lire la suite sur TechCrunch