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AlphaGo AI program goes into stealth mode to beat the pants off Go game pros by Alan Boyle on January 4, 2017 at 5:54 pm January 4, 2017 at 5:59 pm Share 1 Tweet Share Reddit Email ...
A South Korean master of the ancient strategy game Go has announced his retirement from professional competition due to the rise of what he says is unbeatable artificial intelligence.
The Go master, Lee Se-dol of South Korea, had initially predicted he would beat AlphaGo in at least four of the five scheduled games, arguing that the 3,000-year-old Chinese game requires "human ...
DeepMind made a stir in January 2016 when it first announced it had used artificial intelligence to master Go, a 2,500-year-old game. Computer scientists had struggled for years to get computers ...
A South Korean master of the ancient strategy game Go has announced his retirement from professional competition due to the rise of what he says is unbeatable artificial intelligence.
Go is a board game from China that’s over 2000 years old. It’s complex as hell: there are more possible positions in the game than there are atoms in the universe. So news that a Google AI has ...
DeepMind, a division of Google that’s focused on advancing artificial intelligence research, unveiled a new version of its AlphaGo program today that learned the game solely by playing itself.
Over the past 12 months, AI has beaten us at poker, Go, Pac-Man and Dota 2, ... DeepMind's AlphaGo Master AI comprehensively beat the world Go champion across three matches in 2017.