March 9 is destined to go down in human history — yes, you’ve read it at the beginning of countless articles that have flooded the Internet. On this day, people watched the super match between Google’s ARTIFICIAL intelligence AlphaGo and South Korean go player Lee Se-dol through a live network broadcast, witnessing the loss of the first game of human beings, and more and more people believe that human beings will also be defeated by artificial intelligence in the future.



But so what? Ai won chess, but human won the future.

Put aside deep learning, game trees, neural networks and other words that make laymen dizzy. From the beginning of the game of Go, we should have expected that even talented players would be defeated by artificial intelligence. But this is not terrible, without thousands of years of human wisdom in chess precipitation, how can AlphaGo today’s victory? What is really scary is not the growth limit of AI, but the deep misunderstanding and fear of AI.

In that sense, it’s a good thing humans lost the first game. It makes us rethink humanity, the aesthetics of competition, and human intelligence. Artificial intelligence to the human life of all kinds of subversion, help us to the core of life. AlphaGo is not a natural evolution. Even if it can build momentum, hand tendons, test matches and reverse chess games, it essentially reflects the crystallization of human intelligence. A better suggestion, then, might be: “Don’t worry so much”.

Kevin Kelly

“The application of AI is everywhere, and the impact it brings is huge. Because it means that everything can be anthropomorphized, it means that we can accelerate the development of new things, and artificial intelligence in the cloud means that data from two pairs of smart shoes can be shared with each other, which is integrated artificial intelligence. It really speeds up the process of inventing new things.” Clearly, Kevin Kelly, founding editor of Wired magazine and author of Out of Control, is far from worried about the threat ai poses to humanity, and is excited by the endless possibilities of intelligent technology.

In his latest book, Inevitable, he captures the excitement: “The greatest benefit of the age of ARTIFICIAL intelligence is that it will help us define human nature. We need ai to tell us — who are we?”

In his book, Kevin Kelly argues that in a hyper-connected world, thinking differently is a source of innovation and wealth. Being smart is not enough. Commercial incentives will make artificial intelligence associated with industrial power ubiquitous, cheap and smart, embedded in everything we make. Greater rewards will come when we begin to invent new kinds of intelligence and new ways of thinking.

Hawking has called for alarm over the threat posed by artificial intelligence, and Elon Musk has been depressed by his fear that machines will replace humans in the future, but Zuckerberg sees no valid fear in these concerns. When asked about his belief that machines might be smarter than brains in many ways, such as IBM’s deep Blue victory over Chess champion Garry Kasparov, Zuckerberg had this response: “Machines are built to be better than humans at some things, but just because machines are better than humans at some things doesn’t mean machines are capable of learning other things, or connecting different pieces of information to do things that are better than humans, and that’s very important.”



Giiso Information, founded in 2013, is a leading technology provider in the field of “artificial intelligence + information” in China, with top technologies in big data mining, intelligent semantics, knowledge mapping and other fields. At the same time, Giiso’s research and development products include editing robots, writing robots and other artificial intelligence products! With its strong technical strength, the company has received angel round investment at the beginning of its establishment, and received pre-A round investment of $5 million from GSR Venture Capital in August 2015.

When asked, “Is it really impossible to do something like that in science fiction? Don’t we have to worry about ai security at all?” “We’re just as worried about ai safety today as we were 200 years ago if a plane crashed,” Zuckerberg explained. We can’t build airplanes if we always worry too much about safety. Anyway, we need to build the plane first and worry about its safety later. By worrying too much about AI, we are preventing its actual progress. We need to recognize that driverless cars may help us reduce car accidents, and AI systems may even help us diagnose diseases, so holding back AI advances because of safety concerns is the worst possible choice when we could be using AI to make the world a better place.”

Yes, there is an important thing going on in the world, and intelligence is infiltrating into every field, but why worry because there is enough room for imagination?

Demis Hassabis

Even Demis Hassabis, the founder of DeepMind, has said that the same algorithms could be armed to a robot — in other words, to learn real-world environments in the same way that algorithms in a game learn them, and adjust them accordingly. Hassabis speculates that Alpha Go may also open up a new method of research in which machines can quickly identify promising areas of research to help human researchers better navigate.

When Deep Blue beat top chess players several times in 1997, people felt they were up against it. But the result?

“But what is more surprising is that the advent of ARTIFICIAL intelligence has not diminished the ability of purely human chess players. On the contrary, cheap and super-smart chess software has spurred the number of people playing, the number of tournaments, and the quality of players at an all-time high. The number of chess grandmasters has at least doubled since Deep Blue’s first win over Kasparov. Magnus Carlsen, the current no. 1 human chess player, has trained with ai and is considered the closest to a computer of all human chess players. He is also the highest rated human chess master of all time.” Kevin Kelly writes in Inevitable.

Giiso information, founded in 2013, is the first domestic high-tech enterprise focusing on the research and development of intelligent information processing technology and the development and operation of core software for writing robots. At the beginning of its establishment, the company received angel round investment, and in August 2015, GSR Venture Capital received $5 million pre-A round of investment.

Magnus Carlsen

How does this desirable cycle work? The higher the level of intelligence and the wider the scope of application, the more people will want to use it, which will continue to promote the development of ARTIFICIAL intelligence towards the direction of “intelligent”, further broadening the scope of application. Worried about losing jobs to these smart, indefatigable companions? But why should we selectively forget the tedious, highly repetitive tasks that automation took over in the course of human industrialization, and the millions of jobs that industrial civilization opened up for human beings in entirely new fields? Just as 19th-century farmers could not have imagined the jobs most of us have today, humans should dream about the flood of new occupations rather than close their doors and wonder about the future.

“With the help of robots and computer intelligence, we are able to do things that would have been unthinkable 150 years ago. This is the most amazing thing about robots coming into our lives.” Kevin Kelly said.