By Judi McLeod ——Bio and Archives--August 12, 2021
Cover Story | CFP Comments | Reader Friendly | Subscribe | Email Us
"Eric Schmidt climbed he elitist latter as CEO of Google and then Chairman of its parent, Alphabet. He has likely done more than any other human to develop and promote Artificial Intelligence. It was Schmidt who hired futurist and creator of the Singularity theory, Ray Kurzweil, as the head of engineering at Google in 2013. "According to Amazon's description of the book,Three of our most accomplished and deep thinkers come together to explore artificial intelligence (A.I.) and the way it is transforming human society – and what it means for us all. "An A.I. learned to win chess by making moves human grand masters had never conceived. Another A.I. discovered a new antibiotic by analyzing molecular properties human scientists did not understand. Now, A.I.-powered jets are defeating experienced human pilots in simulated dogfights. A.I. is coming online in searching, streaming, medicine, education, and many other fields and, in so doing, transforming how humans are experiencing reality. "In The Age of A.I., three leading thinkers have come together to consider how A.I. will change our relationships with knowledge, politics, and the societies in which we live. The Age of A.I. is an essential road map to our present and our future, an era unlike any that has come before.
"As I have written extensively in my books over the years, the Trilateral Commission is the fountainhead of modern globalization and Technocracy. That is not to suggest that other individuals and groups didn't dream of a New World Order even decades before, but it was the Trilateral Commission and their elitist members who actually pulled it off! "In 2919, Newsweek posted an article that suggested, "Schmidt has been gently aligning himself as the heir to Kissinger, and has populated recent conferences with Google executives." "With the publication of this new book, we now know that Kissinger has officially endorsed his chosen heir. "Furthermore, they have laid out what they see as our certain future. What differentiates them from other dreamers is that they collectively have the power to cause it to happen."‘Henry Kissinger & Eric Schmidt's Big Treatise on Artificial Intelligence Panned in Early, Important Book Review'-(SHOWBIZ 411, Aug 10, 2021)
"Who knew? "Henry Kissinger, age 97, has written a new book. One of his two co-authors is former Google chief Eric Schmidt. "Little, Brown has "The Age of A.I.: And our Human Future" set for a November release. "But very quietly, the book was panned back in June in Publishers Weekly. It's not a good sign.
Support Canada Free Press
"PW wrote: "While they raise thought-provoking questions about the implications of AI on geopolitics (notably as European nations debate whether to use U.S. or Chinese platforms), their musings on the impact AI has and will have on humans' daily lives feel cursory. The authors also rely on familiar examples of AI success stories—AlphaZero, a chess-playing machine, and halicin, an AI-generated antibiotic, come up time and time again. Despite the work's brief moments of insight and the authors' bona fides, there isn't much to recommend this." "Currently the book is number 843,499 with little advance promotion or sales. The PW review doesn't help. "The Age of A.I." started out as an article two summers ago in The Atlantic called "Metamorphosis." So at least the authors are guaranteed a decent review in that magazine when the book is published! "Little, Brown might want to change the title of the Kissinger-Schmidt book, by the way. There are a ton of other previously published books, articles, TV shows, and so on with the same name. Just sayin'…"Safe to say that it is not "decent reviews" the authors of this book seek, but propaganda to advance the coming Brave New World. It's not that Kissinger and Schmidt are off in the murky clouds writing a book whose agenda is changing the direction of humanity that is even the biggest danger.
"Google's unofficial motto has long been the simple phrase "don't be evil." But that's over, according to the code of conduct that Google distributes to its employees. The phrase was removed sometime in late April or early May, archives hosted by the Wayback Machine show. "Don't be evil" has been part of the company's corporate code of conduct since 2000. When Google was reorganized under a new parent company, Alphabet, in 2015, Alphabet assumed a slightly adjusted version of the motto, "do the right thing." However, Google retained its original "don't be evil" language until the past several weeks. The phrase has been deeply incorporated into Google's company culture -- so much so that a version of the phrase has served as the wifi password on the shuttles that Google uses to ferry its employees to its Mountain View headquarters, sources told Gizmodo."Time has proven that a much more honest description of Google's motto "don't be evil" would be with the added words "unless you can do it undercover or from a distance". Google can—and continues to—turn information and truth off and on like a tap restricting viewers and readers to their version of the truth. How is that for doing evil?
View Comments