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AI Superpowers: China, Silicon Valley, and the New World Order Tapa dura – 25 septiembre 2018
"Kai-Fu Lee believes China will be the next tech-innovation superpower and in AI Superpowers: China, Silicon Valley, and the New World Order, he explains why. Taiwan-born Lee is perfectly positioned for the task."—New York Magazine
In this thought-provoking book, Lee argues powerfully that because of the unprecedented developments in AI, dramatic changes will be happening much sooner than many of us expected. Indeed, as the US-Sino AI competition begins to heat up, Lee urges the US and China to both accept and to embrace the great responsibilities that come with significant technological power.
Most experts already say that AI will have a devastating impact on blue-collar jobs. But Lee predicts that Chinese and American AI will have a strong impact on white-collar jobs as well. Is universal basic income the solution? In Lee’s opinion, probably not. But he provides a clear description of which jobs will be affected and how soon, which jobs can be enhanced with AI, and most importantly, how we can provide solutions to some of the most profound changes in the future of human history.
- Longitud de impresión272 páginas
- IdiomaInglés
- EditorialHarper Business
- Fecha de publicación25 septiembre 2018
- Dimensiones15.24 x 3.02 x 22.86 cm
- ISBN-10132854639X
- ISBN-13978-1328546395
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Descripción del producto
Críticas
A New York Times, Wall Street Journal, and USA Today Bestseller! Featured on CBS 60 Minutes Kai-Fu Lee named a Wired Icon, as part of Wired Magazine's 25th Anniversary Feature Publishers Weekly Fall 2018 Top 10 in Business & Economics Featured in the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, the Washington Post, Wired, Financial Times, Bloomberg Businessweek, Business Insider, Forbes, and more. "After thirty years of pioneering work in artificial intelligence at Google China, Microsoft, Apple and other companies, Lee says he’s figured out the blueprint for humans to thrive in the coming decade of massive technological disruption: 'Let us choose to let machines be machines, and let humans be humans.'"—Forbes "Provocative."—Fortune "Kai-Fu Lee believes China will be the next tech-innovation superpower and in his new (and first) book, AI Superpowers: China, Silicon Valley, and the New World Order, he explains why. Taiwan-born Lee is perfectly positioned for the task."—New York Magazine "Both a provocative and readable distillation of the conventional wisdom on AI supremacy, as well as a challenge to it."—Financial Times "AI Superpowers: China, Silicon Valley, and the New World Order, by Kai-Fu Lee, about the ways that artificial intelligence is reshaping the world and the economic upheaval new technology will generate. We need to start thinking now about how to address these gigantic changes."—Senator Mark Warner, when asked about the best book he's read all year, Politico “Kai-Fu Lee's smart analysis on human-AI coexistence is clear-eyed and a must-read. We must look deep within ourselves for the values and wisdom to guide AI's development.” —Satya Nadella, CEO, Microsoft “In his brilliant book, Kai-Fu Lee applies his superpowers to predicting the disruptive shifts that will define the AI-powered future and proposes a revolutionary social contract that forges a new synergy between AI and the human heart.” —Marc Benioff, Chairman & CEO Salesforce “AI is surpassing human intelligence in more and more domains, transforming the planet. Kai-Fu Lee has been at the epicentre of the AI revolution for thirty years and has now written the definitive guide.” —Erik Brynjolfsson, professor, MIT, bestselling co-author of The Second Machine Age and Machine, Platform, Crowd “Kai-Fu Lee is at the forefront of the coming AI revolution, helping us transcend the limitations of thought, reach, and vision. This seminal book on AI is a must read for anyone serious about understanding the future of our species.” —Peter Diamandis, Executive Founder, Singularity University; bestselling author of Abundance and BOLD. “Truly one of the wisest and most surprising takes on AI. Kai-Fu Lee connects it with humans in a logical yet inspiring way. You’ll find this book illuminating and exciting in equal measure.” —Chris Anderson, Head of TED “In this riveting page-turner, one of the founding fathers of China’s AI industry tells the inside story of China’a rise as an AI superpower, and shares his inspiring recipe for us flourishing rather than floundering with AI.” —Prof. Max Tegmark, professor, MIT and bestselling author of Life 3.0: Being —
Biografía del autor
Dr. Lee received his Bachelor’s degree in Computer Science from Columbia University, his Ph.D. from Carnegie Mellon University, and honorary doctorate degrees from the City University of Hong Kong and Carnegie Mellon. He is a Fellow of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE). Selected as one of the 100 most influential people in the world by Time Magazine in 2013, he has authored ten U.S. patents and over a hundred journal and conference papers. He has written eight top-selling books in Chinese, and has more than 50 million followers on social media.
Detalles del producto
- Editorial : Harper Business (25 septiembre 2018)
- Idioma : Inglés
- Tapa dura : 272 páginas
- ISBN-10 : 132854639X
- ISBN-13 : 978-1328546395
- Peso del producto : 454 g
- Dimensiones : 15.24 x 3.02 x 22.86 cm
- Clasificación en los más vendidos de Amazon: nº168 en Ingeniería eléctrica y electrónica
- nº238 en Electrónica y comunicaciones
- nº828 en Relaciones internacionales y globalización
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- Reseñado en España el 29 de enero de 2025Un buen libro para entender la revolución tecnolñogica que representa la Inteligencia Artificial.Además de una gran cantidad de datos contiene ideas, lo que es más importante.
- Reseñado en España el 24 de marzo de 2021Libro tremendamente clarificador sobre el futuro que se viene con AI. Muy bien explicado y fácil de leer. Por supuesto que es el punto de vista del autor, pero la dirección general esperable para el futuro parece muy imparable. Lo que es más subjetivo es la velocidad a la que pueda suceder o la velocidad relativa en diferentes sectores, pero es absurdo esperar cifras contundentes sobre el futuro, y más sobre un futuro que tendrá muchas cosas que todavía ni intuimos. Kai-Fu Lee hace un muy buen trabajo. Pero distinguiría dos partes del libro: una hasta el capitulo 7 y otra desde este. El capítulo 7 explica el cáncer por el que pasó el autor y que le cambió la vida. Antes de ese capítulo es todo lo que uno espera sobre el título del libro y es 200% satisfactorio. Desde el capítulo 7 Kai-Fu se vuelve sensible y humano. Valora las relaciones personales y la responsabilidad. Hace un intento de buscar soluciones al terremoto catastrófico que se ve venir en el empleo mundial. Toda esta segunda parte es buena para la reflexión, pero sin duda el autor no es tan autoridad en estos temas como en los de AI. Eso no quita nada de mérito a toda la primera parte del libro. Ya habrá más gente que busque soluciones creativas a lo que inevitablemente llegará.
Libro importante para entender el futuro. También para tomar decisiones de inversión.
- Reseñado en España el 16 de octubre de 2018Una muy buena explicación de las posibilidades reales de la IA, de los retos que va a suponer esta transformación y de las ventajas de China comparadas con las de los Estados Unidos. China tiene más datos, emprendedores más competitivos y el soporte del gobierno, aunque Estados Unidos lleva ventaja en la investigación fundamental y en las implementaciones empresariales por tener las empresas americanas una mejor base de datos interna.
- Reseñado en España el 8 de marzo de 2019Un libro a tener en cuenta para tener perspectiva sobre la inteligencia artificial y lo que va a suponer en nuestras vidas. Kay-Fu Lee explica los condicionantes de China y Sillicon Valley para estar liderando el desarrollo de IA en estos momentos y cómo ve él hacia dónde podemos ir (tanto cómo optimista y pesimista).
Recomendable.
- Reseñado en España el 23 de agosto de 2021An excellent book that shines the light on the future of AI and how it will play a role in the future of mankind. Totally recommend it.
- Reseñado en España el 15 de febrero de 2020Una visión completa desde una perspectiva muy interesante. Resume bien donde estamos, como hemos llegado aquí y los distintos matices culturales, y hace un buen ejercicio de hacia dónde vamos y los efectos socioeconómicos del desarrollo de la IA.
Recomendable.
- Reseñado en España el 14 de diciembre de 2018On the one hand, a history lesson on the evolution of technology in China, essential to understand its current position regarding A.I. then possible ways for the A.I. allows us to take more care of ourselves and our environment, with lo ve.
THANKS Kay Fu Lee for you book.
- Reseñado en España el 15 de abril de 2019Todo aquel que quiera saber más de como China esta revolucionando internet y la Inteligencia Artificial debe leer este libro.
Reseñas más importantes de otros países
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Guy Munz-JonesReseñado en el Reino Unido el 19 de febrero de 2019
5,0 de 5 estrellas A fascinating read on AI with unique insights from both the Silicon Valley and China perspectives.
I have spent a lot of time in China until end of 2010 but have got a bit out of touch recently and hae little clue about AI. As a novice on AI, I wanted to get up to speed on the basics of it and what we need to be thinking about over the next few years. Kai-fu Lee, with his unique perspectives on AI given his academic background and professional experience in the US and China, has written a most informative and engaging book that has enlightened me on the history of AI, the key players today and their key drivers as well as his own very personal thoughts and recommendations for the future so that we get humans doing what humans do best and machines doing what machines do best. A must read.
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KlausReseñado en Países Bajos el 8 de julio de 2024
2,0 de 5 estrellas Kwaliteit boek
Het boek wordt verkocht als nieuw maar is duidelijk tweedehands, gebruikerssporen, beschadigingen en een parfum lucht.
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sean s.Reseñado en Canadá el 30 de septiembre de 2018
5,0 de 5 estrellas An entertaining and informative read by a uniquely-qualified expert
Venture capitalist Kai-Fu Lee is the former president of Google China, so is uniquely qualified to contextualize and comment on the AI competition between the United States and China. He describes how China was late to wake up to the world-transforming importance of AI:
“But where was China in all this? The truth is, the story of the birth of deep learning took place almost entirely in the United States, Canada and the United Kingdom. The great majority of China’s technology community didn’t properly wake up to the deep-learning revolution until its Sputnik Moment in 2016…
During the age of AI discovery, progress was driven by a handful of elite thinkers, virtually all of whom were clustered in the United States and Canada…” Indeed, the number 1 textbook on artificial intelligence, “Deep Learning” is co-written by University of Montreal professors Yoshua Bengio and Aaron Courville, and Bloomberg’s video “The Rise of AI” explains how Canada became an AI superpower.
“Of the hundreds of companies pouring resources into AI research, seven have emerged as the new giants of corporate AI research – Google, Facebook, Amazon, Microsoft, Baidu, Alibaba, and Tencent. These Seven Giants have, in effect, morphed into what nations were fifty years ago – that is, large and relatively closed-off systems that concentrate talent and resources on breakthroughs that will mostly remain “in house.”…
If the next deep learning revolution is destined to be discovered in the corporate world, Google has the best shot at it. Among the Seven AI Giants, Google – more precisely, its parent company, Alphabet, which owns DeepMind and its self-driving subsidiary Waymo – stands head and shoulders above the rest. In terms of funding, Google dwarfs even its own government. U.S. federal funding for math and computer science research amounts to less than half of Google’s own R&D budget…
The headquarters of my venture-capital fund is located in Zhongguancun (pronounced “jong-gwan-soon”) neighborhood, an area often referred to as “the Silicon Valley of China.” Today, Zhongguancun is the beating heart of China’s AI movement. To people here, the AI AlphaGo’s victories over human Go champions were both a challenge and an inspiration. They turned into China’s “Sputnik Moment” for artificial intelligence…
AlphaGo scored its first high-profile victory in March 2016 during a five-game series against the legendary Korean player Lee Sedol, winning four to one. While barely noticed by most Americans, the five games drew more than 280 million Chinese viewers. Overnight, China plunged into an artificial intelligence fever…
AlphaGo runs on deep learning, a ground-breaking approach to artificial intelligence that has turbocharged the cognitive capabilities of machines. Deep-learning-based programs can now do a better job than humans at identifying faces, recognizing speech, and issuing loans. For decades, the artificial intelligence revolution always looked to be five years away. But with the development of deep learning over the past few years, that revolution has finally arrived. It will usher in an era of massive productivity increases but also widespread disruptions in labor markets – and profound socio-psychological effects on people – as artificial intelligence takes over human jobs in all sorts of industries...
During the Ke Jie match, it wasn’t the AI-driven killer robots some prominent technologists warn of that frightened me. It was the real-world demons that could be conjured up by mass unemployment and the resulting social turmoil. The threat to jobs is coming far faster than most experts anticipated, and it will not discriminate by the color of one’s collar, instead striking the highly trained and poorly educated alike,,,
The AI world order inequality will not be contained within national borders. China and the United States have already jumped out to an enormous lead over all the other countries in artificial intelligence, setting the stage for a new kind of bipolar world order. Several other countries – the United Kingdom, France, and Canada, to name a few – have strong AI research labs staffed with great talent, but they lack the venture-capital ecosystem and large user bases to generate the data that will be key in the age of implementation that follows the age of discovery.” (cf. the Silicon Valley 150, and CB Insights Complete List of Unicorn Companies)
“Whatever gaps exist between China and the United States, those differences will pale in comparison between these two AI superpowers and the rest of the world. Silicon Valley entrepreneurs love to describe their products as “democratizing access,” “connecting people,” and, of course, “making the world a better place.” That vision of technology as a cure-all for global inequality has always been somewhat of a wistful mirage, but in the age of AI it could turn into something far more dangerous. If left unchecked, AI will dramatically exacerbate inequality on both international and domestic levels…
The AI world order will combine winner-take-all economics with an unprecedented concentration of wealth in the hands of a few companies in China and the United States. This, I believe, is the real underlying threat posed by artificial intelligence: tremendous social disorder and political collapse stemming from widespread unemployment and gaping inequality…”
Indeed, in his book on AI, “Life 3.0”, MIT professor Max Tegmark illustrates the rising tide of occupations that AIs can accomplish better than humans, which could soon be almost all occupations. And in his book “Cultural Evolution”, World Values Survey lead researcher Ronald Inglehart describes how we are already entering a world of AI-accelerated inequality.
“Silicon Valley’s and China’s internet ecosystems grew out of very different cultural soil. Entrepreneurs in the valley are often the children of successful professionals, such as computer scientists, dentists, engineers and academics. Most Chinese tech entrepreneurs are at most one generation away from grinding poverty that stretches back centuries. Their ultimate goal is to make money, and they’re willing to create any product, adopt any model, or go into any business that will accomplish that objective…”
The fact that AI development in China is motivated first and foremost by materialist values of making money, is of concern to those with postmaterialist values, such as protecting human rights (cf. “Google Employees Protest Secret Work on Censored Search Engine for China”, New York Times, August 16, 2018).
According to the 2018 Freedom House Ranking, the countries with the greatest respect for human rights are 1. (TIE) Finland, Norway and Sweden 2. (TIE) Canada and Netherlands 3. (TIE) Australia, Luxembourg, New Zealand and Uruguay 4. Denmark. And Canada’s respect for human rights is now attracting AI talent from around the world (cf. “A Trump Dividend for Canada? Maybe in its AI Industry”, New York Times, May 9, 2017). This means that for now at least, Canada is still an AI superpower, a position Prime Minister Trudeau is keen to defend.
“Some predict that with the dawn of Artificial General Intelligence (AGI), machines that can improve themselves will trigger runaway growth in computer intelligence. Often called “the singularity,” or artificial superintelligence, this future involves computers whose ability to understand and manipulate the world dwarfs our own, comparable to the intelligence between human beings and, say, insects.
DeepMind founder Demis Hassabis predicts that the creation of superintelligence will allow human civilization to solve intractable problems, producing inconceivably brilliant solutions to global warming and previously incurable diseases.
Not everyone, however, is so optimistic. Elon Musk has called superintelligence “the biggest risk we face as a civilization,” comparing the creation of it to “summoning the demon.” Intellectual celebrities such as the late cosmologist Stephen Hawking have joined Musk in the dystopian camp, many of them inspired by Oxford philosopher Nick Bostrom’s book Superintelligence.”
For his part in “Life 3.0” MIT professor Max Tegmark writes:
“Suppose a bunch of ants create you to be a recursively self-improving robot, much smarter than them, who shares their goals and helps build bigger and better anthills, and that you eventually attain the human-level intelligence and understanding that you have now. Do you think you’ll spend the rest of your days just optimizing anthills, or do you think you might develop a taste for more sophisticated questions and pursuits that the ants have no ability to comprehend? If so, do you think you’ll find a way to override the ant-protection urge that your formicine creators endowed you with, in much the same way that the real you overrides some of the urges your genes have given you? And in that case, might a superintelligent friendly AI find our current human goals as uninspiring and vapid as you find those of the ants, and evolve new goals different from those it learned and adopted from us?
Perhaps there’s a way of designing a self-improving AI that’s guaranteed to retain human-friendly goals forever, but I think it’s fair to say that we don’t yet know how to build one – or even whether it’s possible.”
Overall, AI Superpowers is an entertaining and informative read. Recommended!
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RogiReseñado en Alemania el 1 de septiembre de 2019
5,0 de 5 estrellas Interessante Sichtweise
Der Autor begründet auf logische Art, warum China zukünftig die führende Nation bei AI sein wird. Interessant aber auch die Ausführungen zur Entwicklung der digitalen Landschaft, des Internetbusiness und der sozialen Medien in den letzten 20 Jahren. Wer sich für die zukünftige wirtschaftliche Macht Chinas interessiert, sollte das Buch unbedingt lesen.
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VReseñado en Australia el 6 de julio de 2024
5,0 de 5 estrellas Truthful yet optimistic view of the future
I would recommend this book to those who are wondering about the role of AI and how it may shape our world