Alliances needed to impose a European code of ethics
Posted: Mon Feb 17, 2025 3:45 am
One of the main challenges for Europe is to train, retain and attract future AI specialists . Even in the United States, the imbalance between supply and demand is divisive. Even if American universities are starting to offer many programs in the fields of AI expertise that include Web Crawling, Data mining, Data Science, NLP, Machine Learning, Deep Learning and robotics, the number of students is below ten thousand, while industries , including the media, are looking for several tens if not hundreds of thousands of experts . And not in 4 years, when the current students will have finished their studies, but right away!
In France, the problem is even more striking . Only a few bolivia mobile database schools offer specialized masters in AI, and once again it is the GAFAs that fill the void. Microsoft has just opened its AI school in Paris, with a short 7-month cycle accompanied by a professionalization contract. Rémi Bergues, Director of Innovation at Paris Région Entreprises , announced a first School for Artificial Intelligence in Paris for this year, without saying more. Here again, by combining the various feedbacks, Europe will be able to propose common solutions for the training of future experts in Artificial Intelligence.
Today, European industries are (too) easily allying themselves with the obvious AI players .
Carrefour is partnering with Google to create an AI lab with around fifty data experts, SAMU is working with UBER, Orange is collaborating with Microsoft to develop responsible AI tools. Facebook has opened its Parisian lab dedicated to AI, the Facebook AI Research (FAIR), with Pôle Emploi as one of the partners. Ethical issues are of course not a European cultural exception.
In France, the problem is even more striking . Only a few bolivia mobile database schools offer specialized masters in AI, and once again it is the GAFAs that fill the void. Microsoft has just opened its AI school in Paris, with a short 7-month cycle accompanied by a professionalization contract. Rémi Bergues, Director of Innovation at Paris Région Entreprises , announced a first School for Artificial Intelligence in Paris for this year, without saying more. Here again, by combining the various feedbacks, Europe will be able to propose common solutions for the training of future experts in Artificial Intelligence.
Today, European industries are (too) easily allying themselves with the obvious AI players .
Carrefour is partnering with Google to create an AI lab with around fifty data experts, SAMU is working with UBER, Orange is collaborating with Microsoft to develop responsible AI tools. Facebook has opened its Parisian lab dedicated to AI, the Facebook AI Research (FAIR), with Pôle Emploi as one of the partners. Ethical issues are of course not a European cultural exception.