Google DeepMind is an artificial intelligence research unit created by consolidating Google Brain and DeepMind. With world-class experts and Google's powerful infrastructure, Google hopes to accelerate advancements in AI. Google Research will remain independent and focus on advancing AI theory, privacy, security and more. By unifying their resources, DeepMind led by Demis Hassabis promises a responsible and ethical AI breakthrough.
. China is witnessing an exponential growth in the demand for Artificial Intelligence talent, to excel in the realm of voice-enabled chatbots and AI-generated content. Despite the country’s huge potential, the number of AI researchers with doctorates has only reached 0.1 percent, far lower than its US counterparts. Companies are offering high packages and other incentives to attract the best AI talent. China's "AI 2000" list from Tsinghua University reveals that the country is lagging behind the U.S in terms of large language and multimodal models. Collaboration with universities and other countries has been necessary to bridge the gap. However, with U.S-China trade tensions, this collaboration has drastically fallen in the past few years.
. China is witnessing an exponential growth in the demand for Artificial Intelligence talent, to excel in the realm of voice-enabled chatbots and AI-generated content. Despite the country’s huge potential, the number of AI researchers with doctorates has only reached 0.1 percent, far lower than its US counterparts. Companies are offering high packages and other incentives to attract the best AI talent. China's "AI 2000" list from Tsinghua University reveals that the country is lagging behind the U.S in terms of large language and multimodal models. Collaboration with universities and other countries has been necessary to bridge the gap. However, with U.S-China trade tensions, this collaboration has drastically fallen in the past few years.
Explore the evolution of tech policy from Obama's optimism to Harris's vision at the Democratic National Convention. What's next for Democrats in tech?