Louis Rosenberg
CEO and Chief Scientist, Unanimous AI
Dr. Louis B. Rosenberg is a computer scientist and current CEO of Unanimous AI, a California company focused on amplifying human intelligence using AI algorithms modeled on biological swarms. Rosenberg is known for developing the first functional augmented reality system at Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL), founding the early virtual reality company Immersion Corporation (NASDAQ: IMMR), and founding the early augmented reality company Outland Research. A prolific inventor, Rosenberg has been awarded over 300 patents worldwide for his work in VR, AR, and AI. Rosenberg earned his PhD at Stanford University and worked as a tenured professor at California State University.
The first of these devices is already on the market — the AI-powered Ray-Bans from Meta.
Tech entrepreneur Alvin Wang Graylin sketches out a bold new age of AI-led enlightenment underscored by compassion.
One of Apple’s key innovations serves as a psychological breakthrough, as its technology eliminates the isolating feel of headset use.
The danger posed by conversational AI isn’t that it can say weird or dark things; it’s personalized manipulation for nefarious purposes.
Imagine going on a tour through the human circulatory system as a tiny cell. That is just one example of education in the metaverse.
2023 will see an “arms race” in mixed reality hardware and software. This truly will revolutionize our society.
Even lifelong technologists and AI researchers like myself were genuinely surprised by the speed and impact of generative AI.
The metaverse is inevitable because it is hardwired into our DNA.
Inside the metaverse, your emotions and physical responses will be monitored, and AI will use that data to influence you in real time. Is that essentially mind control?
The Metaverse could be the most dangerous tool of persuasion humanity has ever created.
Who should be compensated?
Uploading your mind is not a pathway to immortality. Instead, it will create a possibly hostile digital doppelgänger.
For the very first time, an AR contact lens was worn on the eye of a human subject. And it has about 30 times the pixel density of an iPhone.
AI systems can carry on convincing conversations, but they have no understanding of what they’re saying. Humans are easily fooled.
The metaverse may leave us perpetually unsure whether the people we encounter are authentic or high-quality fakes.
Social media distorts the reality of the public sphere.
According to surveys, approximately half of artificial intelligence experts believe that general AI will emerge by 2060.
With this unique opportunity to create a totally new world, why does the metaverse already feature such old-world concepts?
It’s no longer just VR vs. AR. There is an alphabet soup of metaverse acronyms, often used imprecisely. So, what do they all mean?
The Virtual Metaverse will be for gaming and other short duration uses, while the Augmented Metaverse will revolutionize society.
The metaverse has the potential to be revolutionary, for both good and bad. Here is how we can maximize the former and prevent the latter.
If used improperly, the metaverse could be more divisive than social media and an insidious threat to society and even reality itself.
From forecasting stock prices to diagnosing disease, Swarm AI enables better group decisions.