It says something to know that this can be contemplated. It is also excellent news as vast amounts of archived material can be made available. That this is truly huge is often not well understood. Yet imagine the mining industry alone which gathers hard data daily and has been doing so for centuries. Most of that was simply lost. Yet It all had value. That means even the raw data which may be thousands of individual assays.
The importance of doing this cannot be underestimated. Most
interpretation is about a statistically significant number of
eyeballs.
Thus a system in place that squirrels away data will stike gold.
Google Aims to
Archive All Human Knowledge
AUG 21, 2014 01:59 PM
ET // BY GLENN MCDONALD
New research details
emerging this week suggest that Google is after the truth, the whole
truth, and nothing but the truth.
According to an
intriguing report in New Scientist, Google is building a
next-generation information database called Knowledge Vault that’s
designed to index and store what we can reasonably term facts. And
not just some facts — the Vault is intended to continually catalog
and store all facts about our world and our history.
It’s certainly an
ambitious plan, and likely beyond the capability of even the largest
crowdsourcing initiative. But that’s all right, because Knowledge
Vault is fully automated and uses algorithms to turn raw data
gathered online into bite-sized, usable chunks of knowledge.
What’s more, because
of the nature of the knowledge base, the information would be
readable by both machines and humans. You could query Knowledge Vault
directly, as with a Google search. Or you could rely on your future
smartphone — or digital assistant or robotic helper — to do the
searching for you.
The Vault project is
building upon Google’s existing crowdsourced database, Knowledge
Graph, and so far has cataloged about 1.6 million facts. Google
researchers will present a paper on Knowledge Vault next week at the
Conference on Knowledge Discovery at Data Mining, in New York.
It’s all part of a
larger initiative, in the information technology arena, to improve
the manner in which we interact with machines and databases. Similar
knowledge bases are being built by companies like Facebook, Amazon
and Microsoft and IBM.
One of the first
practical applications for these ultra-database systems is to create
a new generation of virtual personal assistants. In other words, Siri
is about to get a lot smarter and faster.
Down the line, the
Knowledge Vault could serve as the foundation for advanced augmented
reality networks. The database would provide instant data, via
heads-up display, on virtually anything you look at. The
Knowledge Vault could also be used, eventually, to model all of human
history and society as a vast collection of pure data. That
knowledge, in turn, could be extrapolated to make predictions about
the future.
Turning all of history
into data and prophesying the future? Those Google guys sure don’t
monkey around.
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