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CoinDesk Podcast Network

SOB: Signal, Noise and the Coming Era of AI Curation

CoinDesk Podcast Network

CoinDesk

News, Tech News, Daily News, Business News

4.7 • 698 Ratings

🗓️ 11 October 2020

⏱️ 39 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

On this “Speaking of Bitcoin” episode, join hosts Adam B. Levine, Stephanie Murphy, Jonathan Mohan and special guest Martin Rerak, creator of AllYourFeeds.com, for a look at how “AI curation” is being used to figure out what’s useful information and what’s just fluff. This episode is sponsored by Crypto.com, Nexo.io and Elliptic Hundreds of tabs In the early days of Bitcoin, there were just a few places you might go to read news and stay informed, but over the years things have changed dramatically. Today there are thousands of projects and hundreds of articles written each day. And that’s assuming you ignore the wilds of YouTube or the depths of crypto Twitter. There were days I was waking up to a hundred tabs that I was basically just reloading from the prior day... You know, looking at Slack, Telegram, Twitter accounts, Discord, Reddit and dozens of publications online [...] It was very easy to point somebody in the [right] direction if they're saying, "Where can I buy cryptocurrency?" But if they were saying, "Is there a use case here for traceability?" or "What do you think I should invest in?" or "How is this project developing?" that becomes a lot more loaded and challenging... - Martin Rerak See also: What Is GPT-3 and Should We Be Terrified? In this episode, we discuss the crypto-media landscape, AI training, the challenges around bias and un-biasing practices, potential impacts of the natural-language-generating algorithm known as GPT-3 and more. Biased AI While unsettling on the surface, the idea of bias within an AI is not as controversial as you might imagine – it’s almost required. As humans, we each have our own experiences and preferences which shape our viewpoint and our biases. Modern artificial intelligence consumes “training material” curated by humans to learn what’s right or wrong for its particular task. Once trained, AI can help us with those tasks and is at its most useful when it’s “instincts” match whomever it is working on behalf of. Of course whether bias is good or bad depends a lot of your priorities. When Google trained an AI to help with hiring, the data around past and current employees led it to believe that an ideal “Google engineer” wouldn’t have a woman’s college on their academic transcript. For Google, their past records did not match their future ambitions and so bias was a problem. But personally, I’ve developed patent-pending AI technology that assists with audio editing, and here the idea of bias is critical. There is no objective standard of what sounds best, only personal preferences. For an AI to assist an audio editor, it must be in tune with those preferences and be able to make decisions that are objectively correct for the person it is assisting. This is much the same with AI assisted news curation. We all have our own preferences, interests and biases which help us decide what we do or don’t care about. On today’s show we dig into this fascinating topic where one size rarely fits all and the future is wide open. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Transcript

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0:00.0

This episode is brought to you by crypto.com, nexo.io, and elliptic.co.

0:06.5

So we're going to get to a point, I think, probably within the next five years,

0:11.4

where this technology will be generating a majority of our content. And that is wonderful,

0:17.9

but also extremely scary.

0:23.6

Hey, folks, when we were first starting at the show in early 2013, I recognized a giant hole in the market.

0:28.6

There was an important forum at Bitcoin Talk and then later the Bitcoin subred it would provide an alternative, but that was about it.

0:35.6

If you wanted news or if like me, you were obsessed with absorbing

0:38.9

all the information you could get your hands on,

0:41.0

those were basically your best options.

0:43.2

But what a difference eight years can make.

0:45.5

Today there are thousands of sites

0:46.8

writing about our industry and even more across

0:48.9

YouTube, Twitter, and platforms like them.

0:51.3

Some doing real journalism,

0:52.7

but most talking their book

0:53.9

or even selling coverage

0:55.0

in some situations. These days, it's not the lack of sources, but the sheer scale of them. And more

1:00.4

importantly, how to find the signal and all that noise. On today's episode of Speaking of Bitcoin,

1:05.8

we're digging into one of crypto culture's biggest problems, figuring out who to trust.

1:10.6

So with all of that said,

1:11.6

my name is Adam B. Levine. I'm joined, as always by the other host of the show, Stephanie Murphy.

1:15.4

Hi there. Jonathan Mohan. Hey, hey. And special guest, Martin Rirak, creator of AI-driven curation tool,

...

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