@aquigley I’d say maybe: we saw the birth and banning (in certain places) of mobile phones. And much of the bans for smoking are designed for non smokers. Interesting to ask “what is the equivalent of passive smoking for social media; and would that be banned?”
Find our latest conference's video interview of @leifhanlen on subject "The Australian RegTech experience" on our web site 👉 https://t.co/AB5QqomS9P 🎥🎥
Yes, and is there a definition of “serious crime”? The metadata collection was supposedly meant to fight terrorism, but it’s become a free-for-all (parts of gov’t, of course). And where is real oversight, due process, court orders?
#adcs2018 best short paper "Extracting Cancer Mortality Statistics from Free-text Death Certificates: A View from the Trenches” by Bevan Koopman, Anthony Nguyen, Danica Cossio, Mary-Jane Courage and Gary Francois: https://t.co/Hdpxh9fRMk
We can only see the true value of the public sector when we start looking at government spending not as a cost, but as an investment, says ANZSOG's @MikeMintrom in his latest book. #ANZSOG @OxfordAustralia https://t.co/37TqlGbWPE
Today we remember Alan Turing (23 June 1912 - 7 June 1954). Scientist, mathematician, cryptanalyst, theoretical biologist & the father of computer science and artificial intelligence.
#ThankYou
if we printed all 2,000,000 STEM papers published every year, put them on a rocket and launched them to Mars with their spacecraft to take them their, it would cost around $3b a year - we currently spend around $10b a year to put them online
I've just had a read of @ellenbroad's forthcoming book "Made by Humans: the AI Condition" from @MUPublishing https://t.co/8Fd2J0EslF It's very good. Luckily she's on an AI panel I'll be chairing in August at @bbwritersfest. And we'll record it for broadcast on RN. @heath_sally
Excellent article on the economics of automation, from Berg etal. (IMF Working Paper).
Our main results are surprisingly robust: automation is good for growth and bad for equality; in the benchmark model real wages fall in the sh…https://t.co/VwTYNQQn0m https://t.co/lkZY9zuVLO
Hayley Teasdale is about to complete her PhD at the University of Canberra in neuroscience & Parkinson’s disease research. "To me, innovation is the best way to help people live healthy and happy lives." Check out her interview! #WCW#STEM@haybrains https://t.co/U3uingIWt9