The AI revolution in surveillance has been happening all around us for years, and is being sold to the public as "convenience" and "safety." If computers are always watching what takes place in the world, then there will theoretically be no more crimes and the world will be well and safe – or will it?
"You can try to run, and you can try to hide, but if they really want to find you it won't be very difficult," writes Michael Snyder for End of the American Dream. "All around us, a global surveillance prison is being constructed."
"Even if you completely stay off the Internet and you totally avoid all forms of modern technology, cameras and satellites will still be endlessly watching you. And once your face has been identified, artificial intelligence can be used to locate you wherever you pop up on the entire planet."
(Related: Did you know that The New York Times is suing Microsoft and OpenAI for artificial intelligence copyright infringement?)
In a recent interview with NPR, Corey Jaskolski, CEO of Synthetaic, an artificial intelligence company, explained how modern AI systems "really can find anything you want anywhere in the world."
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Jaskolski spoke about an "AI revolution in surveillance" that is expanding upon the surveillance technologies that came before it, including the ever-present camera systems that watch over cities, businesses, and even people's homes.
"That footage has mainly been stored locally," the interview host explained, noting that prior to AI there had to be human eyes looking over all the footage. "Not anymore."
"AI systems can now hunt for a van in a city, scan license plates and even faces in real time."
Jaskolski's company is currently developing these types of systems for all sorts of uses, including environmentally to track large livestock operations and their global release of greenhouse gas emissions.
"We've run searches, as an example, across the entire eastern seaboard of Russia for ships, and we can find every ship in a few minutes," Jaskolski bragged. "It's pretty remarkable."
The fact that AI can do this type of thing in a battlefield setting is precisely why big government intelligence agencies are scrambling to adopt as much of it as they can get their hands on – because when computers do all the work, the globalists no longer have to do it themselves.
Synthetaic recently launched what its website describes as "a five-year strategic partnership agreement with Microsoft." That agreement involves Microsoft providing Synthetaic with "nearly [one] million hours (about 114 years) of cloud compute resources."
"This strategic collaboration will unlock a new era of possibilities in computer vision and data analysis, with a wide range of benefits across defense and intelligence, commercial, and non-government agency applications," the website states.
We also now know that AI has made it possible for the watchers who are spying on the world to seamlessly connect everyone's online activities with their offline activities.
"Like I said, there is nowhere to run and there is nowhere to hide," Snyder warns. "Of course, most of us willingly hand them vast troves of personal information about ourselves anyway."
The latest news about the AI takeover of the world can be found at Transhumanism.news.
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