floating questions
You might have heard of Amine Bennouna from a previous episode (here [https://youtu.be/aFR1pdVy_HI?si=hIydrDO2P7h5x5e4]) – from the Math Olympiad in Morocco to an MIT PhD and now a Professor at Northwestern's Kellogg School of Management. Recently, he has been thinking deeply about a critical question: Do we actually need more data for AI? In this episode, Amine discusses the idea that data is the "fossil fuel" of AI , and we have largely burned through the easy reserves. He believes the next frontier isn't about scale, but about quality – knowing exactly which "soil samples" to collect before building the subway line, rather than just feeding the model the entire map. We dive deep into his research on optimal decision-making under uncertainty in relation to data, but we don't stay in the theory. We also wade into the messy, human incentives that shape our world: * The Tenure Game: Why the academic pressure to publish volume is killing "moonshot" research – and why we need more people willing to be misunderstood (like Geoffrey Hinton) to make real breakthroughs. * The Data Marketplace: A future where we stop giving our data away for free and start treating it like the currency it is. * The Crisis of Busyness: Why our generation is wealthier but often less happy , and how "optimizing" your life is meaningless if you don't know the objective function. This conversation is an invitation to pause and ask: Are we collecting the right information, or just more of it?
20 afleveringen
Reacties
0Wees de eerste die een reactie plaatst
Meld je nu aan en word lid van de floating questions community!