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Digital World

The great leap forward

September 26, 2019

Developments in artificial intelligence (AI) are leading to fundamental changes in the way we live. Algorithms can already detect Parkinson's disease and cancer and control both cars and aircraft. How will AI change our society in the future?

https://p.dw.com/p/3QGes

Science reporter Ranga Yogeshwar travels to the hot spots of AI research in Europe, the USA and China and looks at the revolutionary developments that are currently taking place. The rapid growth of AI offers many opportunities, but also many dangers. AI can be used to create sound and video recordings that will make it more and more difficult to distinguish between fact and fiction. It will make the world of work more efficient and many professions superfluous. Algorithms can decide on whether to grant loans, who is an insurance risk and how good employees are. But there is a huge problem: Humans can no longer comprehend how algorithms arrive at their decisions. And another big problem is AI’s capacity for widespread surveillance. The Chinese city of Rongcheng is already using an AI-supported "social credit system" to monitor and assess its citizens. Does AI pose a danger to our personal freedoms or democracy? Which decisions can we leave to the algorithms - and which do we want to? And what are AI’s social implications?