In the United States, there is a culture of risk-taking and technical sophistication, with venture capitalists readily investing in new breakthroughs. In contrast, Europe is seen as slower to adapt and embrace innovation. This can be challenging for startups, but one company has found success by recognizing the barrier of hallucination in enterprise applications and working on it.
The Sunday Times' tech correspondent Danny Fortson brings on Stephen Hsu, founder of SuperFocus.ai, to talk about genetic testing of children (5:15), his new startup SuperFocus (9:15), the hallucination problem for artificial intelligence (11:40), how the Ai revolution could go very badly (17:55), creating an army of AI workers (24:00), how companies are reacting (27:30), starting a company amid the Cambrian explosion of AI companies (32:35), creating AI study buddies (37:00), the “who owns the data” question (43:15), and how education is the tip of the spear in the age of AI (48:45).
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