Wednesday, 25 March 2015


Deep Learning 

Deep Learning is a new field in Artificial Intelligence, it consists of a layered set up by which computers should be able to somewhat mimic humans brains activity and although completely challenging human brains to it's full capabilities is still far from our reach massive advances have been made by companies such as Google and Facebook. I decided to focus on Google's technological improvement in image recognition. The shareholders in this case would be Google but also anyone choosing to utilize this software in the future.


Social Impacts

In it's essence this new computer vision software is designed to analyse a picture and be able to summarize it in a few words accurately, this software is still a prototype but has efficiently recognized real life pictures such as  ''A group of young people playing a game of frisbee'' and ''A herd of elephants walking across a dry grass of field'' these summaries were exactly what the pictures represented. The way it works is that two neural networks specialized in different task have been connected, the first network focuses on processing an image into mathematical representation of its content, the following network has been programmed to generate English sentences based on a automated translation software using those mathematical representations, in other words the first network will ''look'' at the image and report what it ''sees'' while the second will transform the description into a sentence. An advantage would be the fact that scene-describing software could potentially aid visually impaired people while the negative to this software or rather its limitation is that although a large data-based of hand drawn labelled images has been used to train the software there is a lack of natural scene pictures with labeling which limits the training process of the software towards natural scenario pictures.


Ethical Issues

The people responsible for the developments in Deep Learning are all of the researches working towards improvement although in this software Google is not only responsible it is also accountable for any misuses. In addition to aid those whom are visually impaired this software can make image searches much more efficient as it can order them specifically by what they contain and not only  by what their tags or titles are. The potential misleading factor in this software would be its ability to differentiate whether a photo had been Photoshop or not as it could influence the results in a search, moreover if used in daily lives by people the software would have to be perfected in order to differentiate living and non-living objects quickly and efficiently. Lastly for years the image recognition softwares have been scoring 40s and 50s out of 100 in a scenario recognition test at which humans score amongst the 70s, with these new improvements in the two neural network software Google has accomplished a score in the 60s reaching the closest any software has to mimicking the human brain.

Link:
http://www.technologyreview.com/news/532666/googles-brain-inspired-software-describes-what-it-sees-in-complex-images/

Monday, 9 March 2015

Can a phone replace a doctor?

With only 1 doctor per each 10,000 people in Kenya, technology is seen as the easier and best way to aid those who on occasion need medical attention, whether that is a pregnant woman or someone who cannot reach a medical facility. With new apps such as MedAfrica and BabyMonitor casualties and complications can be reduced to everyone, even those in remote locations.

Social Impacts

The IT idea behind it is that an automated survey with medical questions is recorded on a phone number which people would consequently call when medical attention is required, the answers to the survey would be analysed by experts and subsequent instructions would be text back to the patient, including what medicine they should take. The shareholders in this situation are the patients in need of medical attention, the doctors and the developers of aiding apps. The advantage is obvious, more people can have help from medical staff quicker and without having to travel long distances to receive it, on the other hand symptoms can often be misleading perhaps ending in a mistreat of the patients disease as it is thought of as something else. Everyday more people possess a mobile phone and with such services attached to it we can start using and benefiting from phones in different ways, mobile communications are reliable and fast meaning that very rarely will communication between patient and doctor be at risk of stopping. Additionally to overcome any doubts that everyone has access to this new technology a standard mobile phone could be distributed around dispersed villages in order to assure and guarantee that every person has possible access to this service at any time.

Ethical Issues

Those responsible in this article are the mobile phone companies as they have the continuous job of assuring mobile communications across the country and the UN for trying to aid in the development of new technologies to combat the shortage of medical staff. Those accountable for its use are the medical staff using the survey to determine the patients disease, this is crucial and therefore extremely important to be carried out properly. This can be applied to digital divide, the fact that technology could be used in poorer countries to save life highlights the fact that distribution of new technologies should be a benefit to everyone as in more than one way can the devices help our day to day life and more. Lastly the only possible ethical decision in this case would be the of education and training of more medical staff, although it would be great this seems unlikely to happen as in less developed countries people often start working instead of continuing to study stopping their education before the necessary standards required for a doctor and as a result the shortage of medical staff across the country will continue to exist.


Link:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/click_online/9759415.stm

Tuesday, 3 March 2015


Magazine editors, Who can improve on Nature?

This article debates whether it should be acceptable in society to alter picture for magazines, it seems nowadays everyone has adopted a necessity to change reality as it is no longer 'good enough'. The other side is that people buying these magazines are often manipulated by thinking those photographs are real and believe that in order to be 'beautiful' they have to look in such way, giving them the aim of looking like someone who never looked like that to begin with. People accountable are the creators of Photoshop and the magazine editors, those responsible are more often than not those buying the magazines and the magazine owners who allow Photoshoped images to be published.

Social Impacts


Adobe Photoshop was create in 1988 and since then the 'art' of editing pictures has become easier and easier, it is now at the point where people cannot distinguish between what has been edited and what has not, this is why it is controversial, the fact that one can be influenced by a picture believing it is real while in fact it is fake can have monstrous consequences that can affect all of us, this applies to advertisement, war photography and many more. Nevertheless an advantage of such advances in Photoshop is that picture correction was also improve, simple details such as red eye can be easily eliminated and make photos look better. Overall the social impact is that those who understand Photoshop will lose trust on what magazines publish as they soon will believe everything has been edited, on the other hand the others who are unaware of such editing skills nowadays can be negatively affect by the fact that they start believing the perfection they see on pictures is real and try to achieve it.

Ethical Issues

There is no law against photoshoping an image that will be published by a magazine, but maybe there should be, with such abuse of edited images in society no one can believe what they see anymore. The ethical decision would be to stop editing images and show the real picture instead but that would mean destroying an image of celebrities and models have created for themselves while using Photoshop and they would never let that happen, the next best thing was the presence of a stamp on a picture that would allow the reader to understand what percentage of that photo was real and how much of it was fake.



Here's the link from the article:
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/07/21/arts/magazine-editors-and-photographers-on-retouching-photos.html?_r=0

Saturday, 21 February 2015

Mobile Phones help target disaster aid

People utilize new technologies everyday, but for most of the time its uses are predictable and social, the article I have chosen to analyse for my ITGS class is about the use of mobile phones to locate and rescue people within disaster scenarios. The most effective example of this was during the Haiti earthquake, people communicate with each other and used GPS tracking to aid rescuers in a more efficient aid operation.

Social Impacts


Mobile devices have become a multipurpose device and with that GPS tracking has been incorporated into the smart phone.Stake holders include those being rescued (victim of the disaster), search teams or aid rescuers but also technology companies that can further improve their smart phones to suit events like this better. The advantages of such systems would be that an easier and more efficient rescue could be performed of victims if their exact location is known but also a major disadvantage would be that nowadays batteries of smart phones can finish quickly as well as how fragile phones have become adding to the unreliability of this method of rescue. Lastly to overcome this problem a new rescue mode could be featured in smart phones that would allow a continuous broadcast of a signal that could be detected and traced back by authorities to locate victims.

Ethical Issues

Responsibility is hard to determine under such circumstances but accountability would fall under those owning a smart phone, companies who are able to track those mobile phones using GPS and also under disaster situations rescue teams. According to the law using GPS tracking without someones acknowledgement of it is inappropriate but within disaster rescue it is justifiable and it should be used by authorities, what we have to be careful with is the use of tracking outside of emergency situations which would be an invasion of someones privacy. The consequences of unauthorized GPS tracking outside disaster situations could perhaps lead people to turn off their GPS tracking system from their phone and consequently stopping them being rescued in a future emergency situation.




Here's the link from the article:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-14761144

Wednesday, 1 October 2014

As an assignment for ITGS I've been asked to understand and explain 3 different topics of Strand 1:

  • 1.2 Security
  • 1.6 Digital Divide & Equality of Access
  • 1.8 Globalization and Cultural Diversity
For every topic I have chosen an appropriate article and analysed it according to Social Impacts but also Ethically.

Enjoy!!!


Wednesday, 10 September 2014

Introducion


   My name is Diogo, I'm in IB 1 and this is my ITGS Blog. Im originally from Portugal but I've lived in Dubai for 5 years now, my interests vary from football to innovative technologies as well as cinema. 

    I chose ITGS since technology interests me a lot and I will most probably need IT skills throughout my life, it is an exciting course as you get to understand different effects and impacts IT has on social aspects all around the world and understand further how technology has developed to where it is today and how it might helps us solve future problems.



To finish up here's a TED video of Peter Van Manen explaining how Formula 1 racing can help babies, Enjoy!!!