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Google DeepMind

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About Google DeepMind

AI could be one of humanity’s most useful inventions

Who we are

We’re a team of scientists, engineers, ethicists and more, committed to solving intelligence, to advance science and benefit humanity.

Our story

We’ve always been fascinated by human intelligence – it shaped the modern world we live in today.

Intelligence allows us to learn, imagine, cooperate, create, communicate, and so much more. By better understanding different aspects of intelligence, we can use this knowledge as inspiration to build novel computer systems that learn to find solutions to difficult problems on their own.

Like the Hubble telescope that helped us look deeper into space, these tools are already expanding human knowledge and making positive global impact. Our long term aim is to solve intelligence, developing more general and capable problem-solving systems, known as artificial general intelligence (AGI).

Guided by safety and ethics, this invention could help society find answers to some of the world’s most pressing and fundamental scientific challenges. NASA satellite above Earth

Where we began

When we started DeepMind in 2010, there was far less interest in the field of AI than there is today.

To accelerate the field, we took an interdisciplinary approach, bringing together new ideas and advances in machine learning, neuroscience, engineering, mathematics, simulation and computing infrastructure, along with new ways of organising scientific endeavour.

We achieved early success in computer games, which researchers often use to test AI. One of our programs learned to play 49 different Atari games from scratch, just from seeing the pixels and score on the screen. Our AlphaGo program was also the first to beat a professional Go player, a feat described as a decade ahead of its time.

Our Operating Principles

We’re solving intelligence to advance science and benefit humanity. At the heart of this mission is our commitment to act as responsible pioneers in the field of AI, in service of society’s needs and expectations. Read our Operating Principles

Recent progress

We joined forces with Google in 2014 to accelerate our work, while continuing to set our own research agenda. Our programs have learned to diagnose eye diseases as effectively as the world’s top doctors, to save 30% of the energy used to keep data centres cool, and to predict the complex 3D shapes of proteins - which could one day transform how drugs are invented.

Visit Official Website

https://www.deepmind.com/

Community Posts
Hayo News
World renowned AI scientist Mustafa Suleyman appears to disagree with Elon Musk’s assessment of the threats and benefits A.I. technologies could pose in the future.
Mustafa Suleyman, the CEO of Inflection AI and co-founder of Google’s DeepMind, had some strong words for Elon Musk during a post-event interview with the BBC after the recent United Kingdom artificial intelligence (AI) summit concluded on Nov. 2.
As Cointelegraph reported, Musk leaned in to his penchant for sensational commentary during an interview with U.K. prime minister Rishi Sunak at the close of the two day event.
During the conversation, Musk remarked that AI was like “a magic genie,” before warning “usually those stories don’t end well.” (edited)
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Hayo News
For the past month, Mustafa Suleyman has been making the rounds of promoting his recent book The Coming Wave: Technology, Power, and the Twenty-first Century’s Greatest Dilemma.
Suleyman, the DeepMind cofounder who is now cofounder and CEO of Inflection AI (which set off fireworks in June for its $1.3 billion funding), may reasonably be all-talked-out after a slew of interviews about his warnings about ‘unprecedented’ AI risks and how they can be contained. Still, he recently answered a batch of questions from VentureBeat about everything from what he really worries about when it comes to AI and his favorite AI tools. Notably, he criticized what he considers “knee-jerk bad takes around AI” and the “hyperventilating press release” vibe of AI Twitter/X.
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Hayo News
SynthID tags images with watermarks and detects them, providing confidence levels on whether they're AI-generated
Google DeepMind has launched a tool to identify AI-generated images called SynthID.
Launched in beta alongside Google Cloud, SynthID technology embeds a digital watermark directly into the pixels of an image. While undetectable to the human eye, the watermark can signify if an image is AI-generated.
The SynthID system can also scan an image for a digital watermark and can assess the likelihood of an image being created by Imagen, Google's text-to-image model. The tool provides confidence levels for interpreting the results of watermark identification. If a digital watermark is detected, part of the image is likely generated by Imagen.
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Hayo News
AI experts cite ethical concerns over relationships humans may develop with such chatbots
The next time you lie in bed and absent-mindedly ask your old friend Google for a piece of life advice, don’t be surprised if it speaks back to you.
DeepMind, the tech firm’s artificial intelligence arm, has announced it is testing a new tool that could soon become a “personal life coach”.
The project will use generative AI to perform at least 21 different types of personal and professional tasks, including life advice, ideas, planning instructions and tutoring tips, according to documents seen by the New York Times.
It is also being tested for how well the assistant can answer intimate questions about people’s lives.
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DeepMind
Our lives can depend on the weather. How could AI help us predict it? ⛈️

Google DeepMind’s current research is focusing on forecasting out to 10 days to produce results much more accurate than previous models.

Find out more in the WashingtonPost. ⬇️ Should we trust...
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Should we trust AI to predict natural disasters?
AI technologies that can predict the weather are rapidly improving, and they're much cheaper than traditional weather forecasting models. Will they be widely trusted?
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DeepMind
From helping us predict the weather to optimising the world's digital infrastructure, we’re building AI responsibly to solve global challenges and transform society for the better.

Our Chief Business Officer Colin Murdoch explains more on BloombergTV. ⬇️ t.co/6hWFcmUySB
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Hayo News
AlphaGo department DeepMind CEO says its next algorithm will surpass ChatGPT

Demis Hassabis said the company is developing a system called Gemini, whose technology helped AlphaGo beat the human Go champion in 2016.

In 2016, an AI program called AlphaGo from Google DeepMind artificial intelligence lab made history by beating a human champion at the chess game Go. Now, DeepMind co-founder and CEO Demis Hassabis says his engineers are using AlphaGo’s technology to make an artificial intelligence system called Gemini that will be more powerful than the system behind OpenAI‘s ChatGPT.

Still in development, DeepMind’s Gemini is a large-scale language model for processing text, similar in nature to the GPT-4 that powers ChatGPT. But Hassabis said his team combined existing techniques with those used in AlphaGo with the aim of giving the system new capabilities, such as the ability to plan or solve problems.
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DeepMind
We are thrilled to be on TIME's list of the 100 Most Influential Companies of 2023!

Our AI breakthroughs like #AlphaFold will continue to help address some of the world’s biggest challenges and improve the lives of billions of people. TIME100 Most In... #TIME100Companies
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TIME100 Most Influential Companies 2023
Check out TIME's list of the world's 100 most influential businesses
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DeepMind
🔵 RoboCat learns faster than other state-of-the-art models because it draws from a large, diverse dataset.

This feature will advance robotics research as it reduces the need for human-supervised training - a key step to creating general-purpose robots:dpmd.ai/robocat-tw
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DeepMind
🟥 Actions like shape matching and building structures are complex for robots.

They have to master how to control each joint, coordinate movements, and know the physics of their surroundings.

This embodied intelligence comes naturally to humans but it’s very difficult for AI. t.co/qeCwkSDfri
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DeepMind
Introducing RoboCat, a new AI model designed to operate multiple robots. 🤖

It learns to solve new tasks on different robotic arms with as few as 100 demonstrations - and improves skills from self-generated training data.

Find out more: dpmd.ai/robocat-tw t.co/JEytQhjPMf
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DeepMind
“We like to call it science at digital speed.” 🚀

Our CEO DemisHassabis speaks to BloombergTV about how AI could help medical researchers make fast breakthroughs, potentially create better quality jobs and lead to society-changing progress. ⬇️ t.co/rgQMzZezuT
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DeepMind
🌎 From playing games to solving engineering problems, our AI tools are now saving billions of people time and energy.

We hope future general-purpose AI systems could not only help transform technology, but be applied to science, medicine and much more: dpmd.ai/optimising-computer-systems-tw t.co/COziKvg29K
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DeepMind
Our AI started with games. ♟️ But it didn’t end there. 🌐

Meet MuZero and AlphaZero, two powerful models which have evolved to transform computing itself. They’re already optimising data centres, improving the way we watch videos, and much more.

How? 🧵 dpmd.ai/optimising-computer-systems-tw t.co/68wEtG0mOO
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DeepMind
“If we act quickly and responsibly, I believe AI can make life better for billions of people around the world.” 🌐

Our CEO DemisHassabis explains how deploying artificial intelligence safely offers immense opportunities for the UK and beyond. AI could herald...
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AI could herald a new era of scientific discovery for Britain
Bold yet responsible development of artificial intelligence promises immense opportunities
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DeepMind
AlphaDev is just one way our AI models are helping make computer systems more efficient. 🖥️

We have worked with units across Google to apply AI to keep data centers cool, share computing resources across servers and much more. Here's how. ⬇️ Google DeepMind...
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Google DeepMind Unveils AI System to Discover Faster Algorithms
The new system, called AlphaDev, focuses on finding more efficient algorithms for software development
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DeepMind
🔵 How did our AI model AlphaDev learn to discover sorting algorithms on its own?

By treating the task as a game. 🧩

Through deep reinforcement learning, it can improve computer code with no special knowledge needed. Find out more in Nature: AI learns to wr...
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AI learns to write sorting software on its own
A deep-learning approach to improving computer code.
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DeepMind
...Taylan Cemgil, Mohammadamin Barekatain, Yujia Li, Amol Mandhane, Thomas Hubert, Julian Schrittwieser, DemisHassabis, Pushmeet, Martin Riedmiller, OriolVinyalsML and David Silver.
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DeepMind
Work by: DJ_Mankowitz, andreamichi, AZhernov, Marco Gelmi, macselvi, eleurent, CauseMean, shariqbal, Jean-Baptiste Lespiau, Alex Ahern, Thomas Koppe, Kevin Millikin, Stephen Gaffney, Sophie Elster, Jackson Broshear, Chris Gamble, Kieran Milan, Robert Tung, Minjae Hwang…
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DeepMind
🖥️ We've open sourced our new sorting algorithms in the main C++ library - an important stepping stone for AI to help optimise the world’s code.

Millions of developers can use it on AI applications in industries from cloud computing to online shopping: dpmd.ai/alphadev-tw
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