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NanoBio 2007 Day One Speaker: Jason McCoy
Jason McCoy is the Vice President of Global Seawater, Inc., a for-profit firm. They are developing a globalized system for agriculture and aquaculture in order to provide immediate and long lasting planetary ecological balance. The lecture presented today was called “Greening the Deserts of Earth”. The firm explores many biotechnology approaches to global concerns. They…
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NanoBio 2007 Day One Speaker: Dr. Behrooz Dehdashti
Dr. Behrooz Dehdashti has a Ph.D. in Cardiovascular Biology and is currently a senior research analyst at the University of Arizona. He is working on the development of the Syncardia Total Artificial Heart. Dehdashti said that advanced complex atherosclerotic coronary artery disease is a therapeutic challenge, poorly treated by angioplasty and bypass surgery. Many options…
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NanoBio 2007 Day One Speaker: Lisa Hopper
Lisa Hopper is CEO and Founder of World Care, a non-profit organization. She has a BS in Radiology Administration and Physics from George Washington University. In 1997, she put all of her retirement savings into World Care and devoted herself full time to developing the organization. In reference to her work in foreign countries Hopper…
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Challenges & Opportunities: The Future of Nano & Bio Technologies – Introduction
Image caption: Simone Syed (and Michael Anissimov of Accelerating Future) at the Nano/Bio 2007 conference. My day: I am very excited to be attending the Nano/Bio Conference 2007 put on by World Care and CRN (Center for Responsible Nanotechnology). I was allowed to come to this conference on scholarship after Lisa Hopper, the conferences organizer…
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Day Two Speaker: Ray Kurzweil
Ray Kurzweil is an inventor and futurist, perhaps best known now for his books and lectures regarding accelerating change and the Technological Singularity. He joined the Singularity Summit 2007 via satellite. Because his work was referenced often in other speakers’ talks, he addressed some of their comments and conclusions, including a defense of double exponential…
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Day Two Speaker: Eliezer Yudkowsky
Yudkowsky returned to the stage to discuss the challenge of Friendly AI. The problem, to Yudkowsky, is increasingly difficult because it is difficult to pick out, of all mind possibilities, the one that we would consider friendly. In some sense, we would like to develop AI that can create expert AI, and an AI-Theory AI…
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Day Two Speaker: James Hughes
James Hughes is the the executive director of the Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies and host of Changesurfer Radio. He discussed preparation for the future and how futurists can have an impact on public policy. Hughes listed a series of assumptions he makes about AGI and the Technological Singularity, such as AGI is likely,…
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Day Two Speaker: Christine Peterson
Christine Peterson is Vice President of Foresight Nanotech Institute and she talked about how we can prepare for the advent of AGI (what she called “preparing for bizarreness”), with a focus on upcoming risks. According to Peterson, risks, and their potential solutions, can be approached in a top-down monolithic way, or a bottom-up way, in…
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Day Two Speaker: Steve Jurvetson
Steve Jurvetson is a Managing Director for the venture capital firm Draper Fisher Jurvetson. He explored two possible paths to AGI, while emphasizing an evolutionary, bottom-up approach versus designing AGI directly, based on the experience of DFJ investigating and investing in nanotechnology. Evolved systems could result in robust, resilient, and adaptive technologies, such as AGI.…
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Announcement: Michael Lindsay from the X Prize Foundation
Michael Lindsay from the X Prize Foundation announced the possible development of an upcoming series of education X Prizes. After a video about past and current X Prizes, Lindsay provided new details about their latest incentive competitions. Education is a challenge, especially in the United States. The public perceives the school system as broken. The…
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Day Two Speaker: Dr. Charles L. Harper, Jr.
Dr. Charles L. Harper, Jr. is Senior Vice President for the John Templeton Foundation. He provided three big questions people might want to think about regarding AGI and the Technological Singularity: Big Question #1: What do slugs know of Mozart? Big Question #2: How serious is the “dilemma of power”? Big Question #3: How important…
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Day Two Speaker: Peter Thiel
Peter Thiel is an investor, co-founder of PayPal before it sold to eBay, and supporter of the Singularity Institute for Artificial Intelligence. He offered advice regarding investing in a world where the possibility of a Technological Singularity exists. The Singularity suggests to Thiel either profoundly positive or negative outcomes. Since it makes little sense to…
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Day Two Speaker: Dr. J. Storrs Hall
Dr. J. Storrs Hall, an independent AI researcher, inventor, and author, presented a revised version of Isaac Asimov’s Laws of Robotics. Unlike Asimov’s robots, we want our AI to be self-improving. If there are to be laws, they will need to be flexible and abstract, like a conscience. Just like technology, morality can be improved,…
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Day Two, First Speaker: Dr. Peter Norvig
Dr. Peter Norvig is Director of Research at Google. He spoke about the difficulty and inaccuracy of prediction, as well as his thoughts on how AGI will be developed. Prediction by experts has been found by some researchers to be less effective if the expert knew a lot about particular subjects or were driven by…
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Speaker: Peter Voss
Peter Voss, founder and CEO of Adaptive AI, a stealth AGI company, focused on the benefits that might result from the advent of AGI. Voss is optimistic that AGI will be developed in less than 10 years, and potentially in less than 5 years. For Voss, hardware is not a problem. The pieces of the…
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Speaker: Dr. Stephen Omohundro
Dr. Stephen Omohundro, founder and president of Self-Aware Systems, spoke about self-improving systems using the science of microeconomic theory. Using space, time, matter, and free energy resources, AI, like humans, will seek self-improvement and converge on rational agents, a small area of mind space. While evolution lead to rational agents, it could only act through…
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Speaker: Jamais Cascio
Jamais Cascio is a writer and speaker, cofounded WorldChanging.com, and has served as a futurist for several organizations. He introduced the concept of the Metaverse, as it might relate to the Technological Singularity. The Metaverse includes ideas like virtual worlds, mirror worlds, augmented reality, and lifelogging. Each one offers glimpes of how the Singularity might…
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Other Singularity Summit 2007 Livebloggers
Here are two other livebloggers from the Singularity Summit 2007: Michael Anissimov at Accelerating Future David Orban
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Announcement: Marcus Guillen of Artificial Development
Marcus Guillen of Artificial Development (AD) announced today at the Singularity Summit 2007 the company’s first commercial product: the CCortex Spiking Neural Network Engine. A mammalian brain simulator, the technology can simulate up to 100 billion individual neurons and up to 100,000 synapses per neuron. A free version will be provided online, as well as…
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Speaker: Wendell Wallach
Wendell Wallach is an expert in the emerging discipline of “Machine Ethics”, a topic he discussed within the context of ethics as it relates to AGI and the Technological Singularity. Wallach presented a number of difficulties that make these technologies difficult to develop, including complexity of the task, thresholds that must be surpassed first, and…
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