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rjdagost | 5 years ago

I share your frustration. If you're trying to be realistic and straight-forward about the limitations of AI/ML, you're getting little interest from investors. Here's an anecdote. I was at an "AI in drug discovery" conference 2 years ago. One of the presenters, the founder of a drug discovery start-up, emphatically made the claim in a talk that "we should deliberately overhype AI in drug discovery, to raise awareness of what we as an industry can accomplish". I was gobsmacked by this. And yet, in the social mixer afterwards, the investors I spoke with LIKED this approach- they said the boastful founder was bold and visionary, and they didn't care that he was exaggerating the capabilities of his company. So, that's why all we hear is hype- founders are just responding to investor incentives.

That's also why I work as a freelance consultant and not as a founder. I think that autonomous driving (rather, the lack of such) is going to be what triggers the next AI winter. Too much money and hype, too little results for too long- the rope is wearing quite thin from what I can see.

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axegon_|5 years ago

I think the autonomous driving, while a factor, will not be as much of a kick as covid-19 cure and/or vaccine. I mean all the best to everyone trying and I hope someone proves me wrong about this by actually discovering a drug/vaccine through AI. But as far as autonomous driving is concerned, at least there are some visible results. Not as advertised and(to my mind at least) but most importantly not that valuable but at least there's SOMETHING on the table....