Cade Metz, a technology correspondent for The New York Times and author of 'Genius Makers', dives into the fascinating world of artificial intelligence. He shares insights on the evolution of AI from skepticism to breakthroughs, highlighting pivotal moments like the 2016 AlphaGo match. The rivalry between AI methodologies, ethical concerns about human motivations, and the urgent quest for safe AGI are explored. Cade vividly describes how deep learning technologies are reshaping industries and reflects on the complex relationship between humans and their AI creations.
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Roetzer's AI Epiphany
Paul Roetzer explains how Cade Metz's book, "Genius Makers," changed his perspective on AI's significance.
Roetzer had been studying AI for a decade, puzzled by the slow progress, but the book illuminated the recent acceleration of AI innovation.
insights INSIGHT
Demystifying AI
Cade Metz aimed to demystify AI by separating hype from reality.
He wanted to tell a compelling story about the people driving AI's evolution.
insights INSIGHT
2012: AI's Inflection Point
In 2012, a pivotal moment occurred with Jeff Hinton and his team at the University of Toronto.
Their system for recognizing objects in images achieved unexpected accuracy, marking a turning point in AI.
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The Mavericks Who Brought AI to Google, Facebook, and the Rest of the World
Cade Metz
In 'Genius Makers,' Cade Metz provides an inside story of how AI evolved from a fringe enthusiasm to a transformative technology. The book chronicles the lives of mavericks, eccentrics, and geniuses, particularly Geoffrey Hinton, who played a critical role in developing deep learning. Metz explains the technology in an accessible way, highlighting the industrial and academic rivalries, and the vast fortunes and intense conflicts that arose as AI became big business. The book also explores the future implications of AI on human society, including issues of privacy, security, bias, and prejudice.
In this week's episode, show host Paul Roetzer sits down with Cade Metz, technology correspondent for The New York Times, and author of the book Genius Makers: The Mavericks Who Brought AI to Google, Facebook and the World. This special episode took place during MAICON 2021 when Paul and Cade sat down for a fireside chat to discuss the story of AI throughout the past few decades.
Cade's book, published in 2021, gives readers an insider’s look at the mavericks leading the race for AI supremacy. Genius Makers dramatically presents the fierce conflict between national interests, shareholder value, the pursuit of scientific knowledge, and the very human concerns about privacy, security, bias, and prejudice. Like a great Victorian novel, this world of eccentric, brilliant, often unimaginably yet suddenly wealthy characters draws you into the most profound moral questions we can ask. And like a great mystery, it presents the story and facts that lead to a core, vital question: How far will we let it go?
As one of Paul's opening lines of the interview, "[Genius Makers] literally just changed my perspective on the significance of what's happening," this episode dives into greater detail into some important moments in the book.