Page 8 - Cyber Nation: How the Digital Revolution Is Changing Society
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and share information to fi gure out the most effi cient routes for
              each car, saving time and energy. The United States is working
              on overhauling its electrical grid with sensors and other technol-
              ogy to help make the system more aware of how energy is being
              used. Then power can be distributed more effi ciently. Buildings
              and even entire cities could use smart systems to help improve
              energy effi ciency, water usage, waste management, and more.



              Predicting the Future
              Some smart systems use AI to make decisions automatically.
              David Clark, a research scientist at MIT, says, “More and more,
              humans will be in a world in which decisions are being made by
              an active set of cooperating devices.”  These systems can antici-
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                                      pate people’s needs. Algorithms already

         “More and more, humans       suggest new friends on Facebook; come
         will be in a world in which   up with books, movies, music, and other
         decisions are being made     products people might enjoy; and even
         by an active set of coop-    diagnose cancer and suggest treatment
         erating devices.” 64         plans. Eventually, algorithms with access
                                      to enough  data about  a person’s body
         — David Clark, research scientist,
          MIT                         could predict a medical condition before
                                      it occurs. Similarly, data on social interac-
              tions and behavior could someday feed into an algorithm that
              predicts future crimes or confl icts.
                 Connecting the world together via the IoT into smart systems
              improves productivity and effi ciency  but  compromises privacy
              and safety. “The IoT reality represents both huge opportunity and
              huge vulnerability. They go hand in hand,”  says Barry Chuda-
                                                          65
              kov, founder of Sertain Research, a marketing technology com-
              pany. The IoT is vulnerable to a targeted attack or to a natural
              disaster that damages its ability to gather data or communicate
              that data. In addition, governments or organizations with the
              power to tap into a smart system’s data could use that informa-
              tion for surveillance or population control. “In the future, intelli-
              gence services might use the [IoT] for identifi cation, surveillance,




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