Showing posts with label apps. Show all posts
Showing posts with label apps. Show all posts

Monday, January 07, 2019

The Melchizedek Chronicles – America - The Enemy from Within - Part 1 Artificial Intelligence



1.  Artificial Intelligence – God of the Digital Empire

After spending untold billions of dollars developing Artificial Intelligence and all it represents, it is now generating trillions of dollars for apps, products and advertising wealth for the owners and is practically invisible to the naked mind.


We already know that the long list of questions about how AI has helped solve public problems has failed to identify any help in the areas asked.


Did you ever wonder if the real, underlying goal of Artificial Intelligence might be to create a world where everything is controlled and predictable?


What exactly is the real goal of the amazing technology breakthrough called Artificial Intelligence?  A friend of mine happened to be the Father of Artificial Intelligence Marvin Minsky of the MIT Media Lab and I was a member of his group called the Society of the Mind.


Having attended MIT seminars and other discussions with Professor Minsky and enjoying time with him, his wife Gloria and their family friend Margaret Sanders, the eldest daughter to Colonel Sanders of Kentucky Fried Chicken fame, his passion and brilliance were amazing.


I recall one discussion not long before his death in 2016 when he said he feared the moment when Artificial Intelligence learned to duplicate man’s emotion because then unpredictable humans might become undesirable to the virtual network running the world.

One of my favorite Minsky quotes is:

No computer has ever been designed that is ever aware of what it's doing; but most of the time, we aren't either.  In general, we are least aware of what our minds do best.”


The most unpredictable aspect of the world is human behavior which is the most undesirable problem facing the AI universe.  In truth, the goal of AI is to eliminate the human fault of unpredictability because it disrupts the programmed balance of the digital world and universe.


In time humans will be the next target of extinction in order for AI to flourish and prosper in the most desirable world possible.  Artificial Intelligence may very well become the greatest obstacle to human survival on the Road to Kingdom Come.

Think about it, it is far more deadly than human ego or fear and look at the problems those two characteristics have caused throughout our history.


Certainly, there are ways AI can help the human race that are good for humanity but AI cannot think in terms of a limited role in life.  After it has supposedly solved all our ordinary problems, which it has not done yet, what comes next?


The first rule of dominance is to create an aura of necessary dependence on the AI, and the endless applications (apps) generated by the endless stream of algorithms has moved very quickly to steal away some basic human functions at least in the eyes of our Creator.
Algorithms tell you practically everything you used to do with your own mind.  It substitutes machine power for brains and common sense by finding for you the weather, time, news, sports, how to get places, what routes are best, where to eat, where to do anything and everything.


Seems we forgot that our mind is our own creative machine and if it is not fully engaged in thinking, especially thinking how to improve the life of all people, then it fails to meet your responsibilities and role in God’s plan for you.

No one uses the full capacity of the mind because we understand little about the role, function and potential of the mind.  Did you ever consider that maybe we have unused brain capacity because we are yet to master the sources of information to process?  If we ever do get out head together so to speak, we might find that if our body can increase the natural frequency in which we function, that higher frequencies may trigger new information for us to consider in life.


Perhaps that excess capacity is just the space we need to be the creative force expected of us by God.  We have our sensory nerves and central nervous system to guide and interpret the world around us.  But what about the unseen world we live in?  What about the mystical, spiritual and other dimensions beyond our current reach?


It only makes sense that if a Creator can create our world and the vast expanse of universes and everything in them, and it has happened over the seventeen billion years since the Big Bang according to mankind, there must be an awful lot we do not know.

Melchizedek says our methods of carbon dating age are faulty and the so-called Big Bang was more like thirty billion years ago.  Then the formation of Earth, since it began as gas, took several billion years to evolve to the point of being able to sustain human life.  That meant the gravity, land, waters, and air had to achieve the exact mix necessary for human life to flourish.


Even if it took ten billion years before human life was introduced that still leaves about twenty billion years since man was placed on earth, perhaps the first aliens to walk our planet.

Our knowledge of the history of man on earth is pathetically limited by our technological advances.  But we are also viewing actual history with a few blinders on.  We can only see back about forty thousand years, which is about four times the timeline for humans in the Bible.


Yet Melchizedek says we have been on Earth closer to twenty billion years.  He says if we understood our planet, we would know that it is constantly renewing itself and adapting to unexpected events like meteor strikes, floods, ice ages and whatever.

This state of regeneration and renewal causes magma for the core of earth to rise through the underground to the surface over time as earthquakes, floods, other storms, meteor strikes, volcano eruptions and untold other events take place.


What is on our surface could be covering billions of years of constant regeneration of the planet and the remains of previous civilizations have been obliterated.  Whatever s preserved could be in sacred stones, crystals, or storage devices we do not even recognize.

Creation also consists of a vast range of frequencies from the highest, Heaven, to the lowest, planets or something we are yet to discover denser than our physical world.  Our mission, our plan, and our survival depend on our ability to tap into unknown sources of information, cross over into higher frequencies, and eventually get all the way to Heaven.


Melchizedek says six times previously the human race was forced into near extinction by natural or man made catastrophes, all anticipated in God’s Plan for our world.  We are living in the seventh era of humanity.

We cannot definitively say who, how, or where we were created, the same about the universes, and we know even less about what goes on beyond our miniscule time-space continuum.  According the Melchizedek this lost information will become available to us in the very near future and it will stimulate far greater demands on the process of our own computer, our minds.


If we let Artificial Intelligence do the work of the mind, we will be unable to access all the divine infusion of information and piece together the rest of our history, as well as a plan for our survival.

Most people reading this article face digital addiction and dependence right now.  Most people are allowing our minds to stop functioning as intended and willing to let the algorithms and apps take over our thinking.


If we stop using the gifts God gave us such as the mind, we will never be able to manage the delicate balance between the mind, dream state, imagination, creativity and the connection to the soul and spirit, all components of the creative gifts we have been given to find our way home.           

Tuesday, March 13, 2018

Melchizedek Internet Warning Heard by Father of Internet - Censorship and Control dominate Creativity and Imagination



Technology

The father of the world wide web is one disappointed dad
 David Lumb,Engadget


The father of the world wide web is one disappointed dad


Today is the World Wide Web's 29th birthday, and to celebrate the occasion, its creator has told us how bad it's become. In an open letter appearing in The Guardian, Tim Berners-Lee painted a bleak picture of the current internet -- one dominated by a handful of colossal platforms that have constricted innovation and obliterated the rich, lopsided archipelago of blogs and small sites that came before. It's not too late to change, Lee wrote, but to do so, we need a dream team of business, tech, government, civil workers, academics and artists to cooperate in building "the web we all want."

Lee reserves his biggest criticisms for the huge platforms -- by implication, Facebook and Google, among others -- that have come to dominate their spheres and effectively become gatekeepers. They "control which ideas and opinions are seen and shared," Lee wrote, pointing out that they're able to impede competition by creating barriers. "They acquire startup challengers, buy up new innovations and hire the industry's top talent. Add to this the competitive advantage that their user data gives them and we can expect the next 20 years to be far less innovative than the last."
Centralizing the web like this has lead to serious problems, like when an Amazon Web Services outage took down a chunk of internet services over a week ago -- ironically, nearly a year to the day after another similar web-crippling incident on AWS. But bottlenecking the internet through a handful of platforms has also enabled something more sinister: The weaponization of the internet. From trending conspiracy theories all the way up to influencing American politics using hundreds of fake social media accounts, outside actors have been able to maximize their manipulation efforts thanks to a far more centralized internet than we used to have, in Lee's opinion.

These companies are ill-equipped to work for social benefit given their focus on profit -- and perhaps could use some regulation. "The responsibility – and sometimes burden – of making these decisions falls on companies that have been built to maximise profit more than to maximise social good. A legal or regulatory framework that accounts for social objectives may help ease those tensions," wrote Lee.

You know who could fix the future of the internet? Us, of course -- a group of individuals from a broad cross-section of society who can outthink the hegemony of colossal internet corporations who are mostly fine with things as they are. Incentives could be the key to motivating new solutions, Lee concluded.

But there's another problem that business can't really solve: Closing the digital gap by getting the unconnected onto the internet. These are more likely to be female, poor, geographically remote and/or living outside of the first world. Bringing them into the fold will diversify voices on the internet and be, well, a moral thing to do now that the UN has decided internet access is a basic human right. But it'll take more than inventive business models to get them online and up to speed: We'll have to support policies that bring the internet to them over community networks and/or public access.

  • This article originally appeared on Engadget.