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Safe Interaction of Technocratic Societies Through Standardy Ensemble of Intellectual Virtual Agents

Received: 17 August 2020     Accepted: 25 August 2020     Published: 7 September 2020
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Abstract

Humanity, as far as possible, must to act ahead of schedule, predict the possible dangers that may arise when introducing technologies using artificial intelligence. Experts say this today. Hazards are technological, legal, legal and ethical. New technologies pose both technical and ethical challenges. Experts express various approaches to the principles of establishing responsibility for the actions of artificial intelligence: the responsibility of a particular subject - a manufacturer, developer, owner, user, expert or programmer. Human ingenuity and the desire for perfection, combined with the capabilities of new technologies, can solve the problems of mankind. Standardization of artificial intelligence can ensure security solutions. ISO focuses on standards relevant to the information and communication technology (ICT) industry. International Standards Association is focused on reaching out to government and industry in all of the locations around the world where its governance meetings are held. ISO pioneered work on standards related to ethically aligned design, this area is still in its infancy. The integration of AI enabled technologies in the daily lives of ordinary people is rapidly increasing. An appropriate standard could provide consumers with a reasonable level of comfort and assurance that AI has been developed conforming to ethical principals that protect their rights, e.g. privacy, transparency, and inclusiveness. 99 percent of people don't know how standards make modern society work. Standardization professionals, as well as those that understand the profession and its impact, are only one percent of the population. General population 99 percent expect everything to work, often with little interest in the details. They only notice when it does not work, and then it's a manufacturer or a government that are held to task when this happens (not standards). Standards are mostly voluntary, with the ones that governments adopt become regulatory. By driving greater informed choice for consumers, there is heightened competition between developers and companies to gain market share in new areas so everything just works. Standardization in these areas will ensure that. If there is truly one percent that are aware of the impact, then this is indication of the huge responsibility that standards professionals have to benefit humanity to ensure everything works. The importance of standards to the work and careers of ICT practitioners continues to motivate the content of new innovative standardization. Russia recently formed an AI standardization committee to become involved in existing international AI work at the ISO.

Published in Control Science and Engineering (Volume 4, Issue 1)
DOI 10.11648/j.cse.20200401.12
Page(s) 8-15
Creative Commons

This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited.

Copyright

Copyright © The Author(s), 2020. Published by Science Publishing Group

Keywords

Technocratic Societies, High-Tech Synergies, Intelligent Interoperable Agents, Utility and Preference Criteria

References
[1] ISO/IEC Directives, Part 2, Rules for the structure and drafting of International Standards, 2004.
[2] B. Du Boulay. "Artificial Intelligence as an Effective Classroom Assistant". IEEE Intelligent Systems, V 31, p. 76–81. 2016.
[3] M. R. Sumner, B. J. Newendorp and R. M. Orr. "Structured dictation using intelligent automated assistants". N US 9,865,280, 2018.
[4] S. Hong. "Artificial intelligence audio apparatus and operation method thereof". N US 9,948,764, Available at: https://patents.google.com/patent/US20150120618A1/en. 2018.
[5] Evgeniy Bryndin. Digital technologies of the industry 4.0. Chepter 10, С. 201-222, Book: Computer Science Advances: Research and Applications. Nova Science Publisher. 2019. 252 с.
[6] Evgeniy Bryndin. Cognitive Robots with Imitative Thinking for Digital Libraries, Banks, Universities and Smart Factories. International Journal of Management and Fuzzy Systems. V. 3, N. 5, 2017, pp 57-66.
[7] Evgeniy Bryndin. Collaboration of Intelligent Interoperable Agents via Smart Interface. International Journal on Data Science and Technology, Vol. 5, № 4. 2019. Pages: 66-72.
[8] Evgeniy Bryndin. Development of artificial intelligence by ensembles of virtual diversification agents. International Journal of Research in Engineering. Volume 2; Issue 1; 2020; Page 08-14.
[9] Evgeniy Bryndin. Human Digital Doubles with Technological Cognitive Thinking and Adaptive Behaviour. Software Engineering, Volume 7, Issue 1, 2019. P. 1-9.
[10] Frank Chen, “AI, Deep Learning, and Machine Learning: A Primer,” Andreessen Horowitz, June 10, 2016, http://a16z.com/2016/06/10/ai-deep-learning-machines.
[11] Evgeniy Bryndin. Robots for Communication in Public in High-Tech Industry Life and Space. Frontiers Journal of Current Engineering Research. Vol. 1, Issue 1, 2019. P. 1-10.
[12] Evgeniy Bryndin. Mainstreaming technological development of industrial production based on artificial intelligence. COJ Technical & Scientific Research, 2 (3). 2019. P. 1-5.
[13] Evgeniy Bryndin. Robots with Artificial Intelligence and Spectroscopic Sight in Hi-Tech Labor Market. International Journal of Systems Science and Applied Mathematic, Vol. 4, № 3, 2019. Pages: 31-37.
[14] Evgeniy Bryndin. Increased Sensitivity and Safety of Cognitive Robot by Development of Professional and Behavioral Skills. International Journal of Research in Engineering. Volume-2, Issue-1, 2020. Pages: 14-21.
[15] Evgeniy Bryndin. Collaboration Robots with Artificial Intelligence as Digital Doubles of Person for Communication in Public Life and Space. Budapest International Research in Exact Sciences (BirEx-Journal), Volume 1, No. 4, 2019. P: 1-11.
[16] Evgeniy Bryndin. Development of Artificial Intelligence by Ensembles of Virtual Agents with Mobile Interaction. Automation, Control and Intelligent Systems. Volume 8; Issue 1. 2020. Pages: 1-8.
[17] AI white paper editing committee of Information Technology Promotion Agency, Japan. "Artificial Intelligence White Paper" (in Japanese). Kadokawa Ascii Research Laboratories, Inc, 2017.
[18] Evgeniy Bryndin. Development of Artificial Intelligence by Ensembles of Virtual Agents on Technological Platforms. COJ Technical & Scientific Research. 2 (4). 2020. Pages: 1-8.
[19] Evgeniy Bryndin. Practical Development of Creative Life-Saving Strong Artificial Intelligence. Communications, Volume. 7, Issue 2, 2019. Pages: 31-39.
[20] Preparing for the Future of Artificial Intelligence, Executive Office of the President, National Science and Technology Council Committee on Technology, October 2016.
[21] Evgeniy Bryndin. Transformation Modeling of Nanostructures by Cognitive Systems according to Big Smart Data. Chepter 3, P. 21-28. Book “New Materials: Preparation, Properties and Applications in the Aspect of Nanotechnology”. USA: Nova Science Publisher. 2020. 250 p.
[22] Peter Stone, Rodney Brooks, Erik Brynjolfsson, Ryan Calo, Oren Etzioni, Greg Hager, Julia Hirschberg, Shivaram Kalyanakrishnan, Ece Kamar, Sarit Kraus, Kevin Leyton-Brown, David Parkes, William Press, AnnaLee Saxenian, Julie Shah, Milind Tambe, and Astro Teller. "Artificial Intelligence and Life in 2030." One Hundred Year Study on Artificial Intelligence: Report of the 2015-2016 Study Panel, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, September 2016. Doc: http://ai100.stanford.edu/2016-report.
[23] Evgeniy Bryndin. Formation and Management of Industry 5.0 by Systems with Artificial Intelligence and Technological Singularity. American Journal of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering. Volume 5, Issue 2. 2020. pp. 24-30.
[24] Evgeniy Bryndin. Increase of Safety Use Robots in Industry 4.0 by Developing Sensitivity and Professional Behavioral Skills. American Journal of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering. Volume 5, Issue 1, 2020. Pages: 6-14.
[25] Evgeniy Bryndin. Formation of Technological Cognitive Reason with Artificial Intelligence in Virtual Space. Britain International of Exact Sciences Journal, V.. 2 No. 2, 2020. P. 450-461.
[26] ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC 42/WG 4 Use cases and applications Convenorship: JISC (Japan). 2019-12-23. https://isotc.iso.org/livelink/livelink/open/jtc1sc42wg4.
[27] Evgeniy Bryndin. Standardization of Artificial Intelligence for the Development and Use of Intelligent Systems. Advances in Wireless Communications and Networks. Voume 6, Issue 1, pp. 1-9, 2020.
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  • APA Style

    Evgeniy Bryndin. (2020). Safe Interaction of Technocratic Societies Through Standardy Ensemble of Intellectual Virtual Agents. Control Science and Engineering, 4(1), 8-15. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.cse.20200401.12

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    ACS Style

    Evgeniy Bryndin. Safe Interaction of Technocratic Societies Through Standardy Ensemble of Intellectual Virtual Agents. Control Sci. Eng. 2020, 4(1), 8-15. doi: 10.11648/j.cse.20200401.12

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    AMA Style

    Evgeniy Bryndin. Safe Interaction of Technocratic Societies Through Standardy Ensemble of Intellectual Virtual Agents. Control Sci Eng. 2020;4(1):8-15. doi: 10.11648/j.cse.20200401.12

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  • @article{10.11648/j.cse.20200401.12,
      author = {Evgeniy Bryndin},
      title = {Safe Interaction of Technocratic Societies Through Standardy Ensemble of Intellectual Virtual Agents},
      journal = {Control Science and Engineering},
      volume = {4},
      number = {1},
      pages = {8-15},
      doi = {10.11648/j.cse.20200401.12},
      url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.cse.20200401.12},
      eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.cse.20200401.12},
      abstract = {Humanity, as far as possible, must to act ahead of schedule, predict the possible dangers that may arise when introducing technologies using artificial intelligence. Experts say this today. Hazards are technological, legal, legal and ethical. New technologies pose both technical and ethical challenges. Experts express various approaches to the principles of establishing responsibility for the actions of artificial intelligence: the responsibility of a particular subject - a manufacturer, developer, owner, user, expert or programmer. Human ingenuity and the desire for perfection, combined with the capabilities of new technologies, can solve the problems of mankind. Standardization of artificial intelligence can ensure security solutions. ISO focuses on standards relevant to the information and communication technology (ICT) industry. International Standards Association is focused on reaching out to government and industry in all of the locations around the world where its governance meetings are held. ISO pioneered work on standards related to ethically aligned design, this area is still in its infancy. The integration of AI enabled technologies in the daily lives of ordinary people is rapidly increasing. An appropriate standard could provide consumers with a reasonable level of comfort and assurance that AI has been developed conforming to ethical principals that protect their rights, e.g. privacy, transparency, and inclusiveness. 99 percent of people don't know how standards make modern society work. Standardization professionals, as well as those that understand the profession and its impact, are only one percent of the population. General population 99 percent expect everything to work, often with little interest in the details. They only notice when it does not work, and then it's a manufacturer or a government that are held to task when this happens (not standards). Standards are mostly voluntary, with the ones that governments adopt become regulatory. By driving greater informed choice for consumers, there is heightened competition between developers and companies to gain market share in new areas so everything just works. Standardization in these areas will ensure that. If there is truly one percent that are aware of the impact, then this is indication of the huge responsibility that standards professionals have to benefit humanity to ensure everything works. The importance of standards to the work and careers of ICT practitioners continues to motivate the content of new innovative standardization. Russia recently formed an AI standardization committee to become involved in existing international AI work at the ISO.},
     year = {2020}
    }
    

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Author Information
  • Research Department, Research Center "NATURAL INFORMATICS," Novosibirsk, Russia

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