Garry Kasparov: Don't fear intelligent machines. Work with them
Garry Kasparov is esteemed by many as the greatest chess player of all time. Now he’s engaged in a game with far higher stakes: the preservation of democracy. Full bio
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simultaneous exhibition
best chess-playing machines
much of a surprise
at the same time.
against just one computer
as a matter of life and death.
African American folk legend,
is a part of a long historical narrative
is standard now.
as if they had vanished from the Earth.
like "The Terminator" or "The Matrix"
can compete on equal terms
competition since John Henry,
that I won the first match --
the following year in New York.
special calendar entry
who failed to climb Mt. Everest
and Tenzing Norgay
the world champion
not that Deep Blue did it,
was a human triumph,
are surpassed by our own creations.
and other founders of computer science
could be crunched by brute force,
into the mysteries of human intelligence.
with these machines.
in 1996 in February,
for more than 10 years,
world championship games
other top players in other competitions.
and looking into their eyes.
the chessboard from Deep Blue.
in a driverless car
manager issues an order at work.
and IBM had invested heavily.
had no such worries at all.
with his hammer in his hand.
a human chess champion.
on the latest mobile phone
that nobody would touch the game
a popular pastime
out of our technology,
out of our humanity.
if you can't beat them, join them.
combining our strengths,
plus machine's calculation,
competition against another elite player.
human and machine skills effectively.
its home on the internet,
freestyle chess tournament
and top machines participated,
of amateur American chess players
at the same time.
the superior chess knowledge
computational power of others.
is superior to a strong human player
to help us coach our machines
from a foreign newspaper,
learns from our corrections.
in medical diagnosis, security analysis.
with 90 percent accuracy,
my match with Deep Blue,
"The Brain's Last Stand" headline
after people with college degrees
who fought machines and lost,
this is excellent, excellent news.
has ceased to make progress.
technological progress stops.
from our lives,
about what our machines can do today.
about what they still cannot do today,
of the new, intelligent machines
are too intelligent,
we grew complacent
or even playing chess.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Garry Kasparov - Grandmaster, analystGarry Kasparov is esteemed by many as the greatest chess player of all time. Now he’s engaged in a game with far higher stakes: the preservation of democracy.
Why you should listen
Garry Kasparov became the youngest world champion ever at 22 in 1985 and spent twenty years as the world's top-rated player. His legendary matches against the IBM supercomputer Deep Blue in 1996 and 1997 made him a central figure in artificial intelligence and the evolution of the human-machine relationship. He retired from chess in 2005 to become a leader of the Russian pro-democracy movement against the rising dictatorship of Vladimir Putin. He is the chairman of the New York-based Human Rights Foundation and has become a powerful voice for individual freedom worldwide. As a Senior Visiting Fellow at the Oxford Martin School, Kasparov specializes in interdisciplinary collaboration and, as he puts it, "how our technology can make us more human." He is a member of the executive board of the Foundation for Responsible Robotics.
Kasparov's latest book is Deep Thinking: Where Machine Intelligence Ends and Human Creativity Begins, which details his legendary matches against Deep Blue and shares his optimistic insights into our human plus machine future. His 2015 book Winter Is Coming detailed the rise of Putin's Russia as well as Kasparov's persecution and self-exile, and it serves chilling warnings of reactionary forces gathering in the West.
Garry Kasparov | Speaker | TED.com