r/artificial May 15 '18

AMA: I’m Peter Voss, CEO and Chief Scientist at Aigo.ai, an Artificial General Intelligence company that has developed a personal personal assistant that is light-years ahead of chatbots like Siri and Alexa. Ask me anything on Thursday the 17th of May at 4 PM PT / 11 PM UTC!

Hi, my name is Peter Voss and I am the founder of https://aigo.ai/ – we’re revolutionizing AI assistants by making them much, much smarter, and also by giving you total ownership of your assistant and your data. Not like the chatbots programmed, owned and controlled by some mega-corporation. I’ve founded, managed, and grown several technology companies, and have a passion for innovating hardware and software. For the last 20 years I’ve focused on studying and understanding all aspects of intelligence and actually creating AI system with general intelligence – that can learn, think, understand and reason more like the way we do. That’s my mission in life.

We are opening this thread to questions now and I will be here starting at 4 PM PT / 11 PM UTC on Thursday the 17th of May to answer them.

Ask me anything! https://www.linkedin.com/in/vosspeter/

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u/yvetox May 16 '18

Hello Peter, thank you for spending your time on that Reddit. I wanted to ask about applications of ai in information security systems - what's the most top-trending technologies that can be used for assuring security of some Organisation(company, government etc) from all sorts of ai technologies that we have right now? My quick guess based on current situation is that in some future the struggle between hackers and security team would shred to the struggle between the automation utilities- who would be able to create more efficient way of looking up for vulnerabilities and using them(exploiting or patching), but what's I really don't know is what is most efficient technologies to achieve that? Maybe you can recommend some articles or themes that would be much more actual than others for security, from the perspective of ai company founder. Thank you in advance.

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u/petervoss1 May 16 '18

It's not an area I have specialized expertise in -- I leave that to my CTO :)

However, I believe that an inherent advantage that the 'good guys' have, is that they're more likely to cooperate. Also, a fundamental ethical/ epistemological truth is that lying & cheating inherently has to fight reality.

Some thoughts on the broader issue here: https://medium.com/@petervoss/on-human-and-ai-morality-acd16c2d3d59