Google AI beats Chinese master in ancient
game of Go
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[May 23, 2017]
By Cate Cadell
BEIJING (Reuters) - A Google artificial
intelligence program defeated a Chinese grand master at the ancient
board game Go on Tuesday, a major feather in the cap for the firm's AI
ambitions as it looks to woo Beijing to gain re-entry into the country.
In the first of three planned games in the eastern water town of Wuzhen,
the AlphaGo program held off China's world number one Ke Jie in front of
Chinese officials and Google parent Alphabet's <GOOGL.O> chief executive
Eric Schmidt.
The victory over the world's top player - which many thought would take
decades to achieve - underlines the potential of artificial intelligence
to take on humans at complex tasks.
Wooing Beijing may be less simple. The game streamed live on
Google-owned YouTube, while executives from the DeepMind unit that
developed the program sent out updates live on Twitter <TWTR.N>. Both
are blocked by China, as is Google search.
Google pulled its search engine from China seven years ago after it
refused to self-censor internet searches, a requirement of Beijing.
Since then it has been inaccessible behind the country's nationwide
firewall.
The ceremonial game - the second time AlphaGo has gone head-to-head with
a master Go player in a public showdown - represents a major
bridge-building exercise for Google in China, following a charm
offensive in recent years.
It has announced plans to bring some services back to the country,
including its app store Google Play.
In March it also said Chinese users would be able to access the
Translate mobile app, marking its most recent success launching a
previously banned service. Like AlphaGo, Translate also uses DeepMind's
artificial intelligence software.
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Chinese Go player Ke Jie puts a stone against Google's artificial
intelligence program AlphaGo during their first match at the Future
of Go Summit in Wuzhen, Zhejiang province, China May 23, 2017.
REUTERS/Stringer
Beijing is pushing to become a major player in artificial
intelligence. Chinese search engine giant Baidu Inc <BIDU.O>,
launched an AI lab in March with China's state planner, the National
Development and Reform Commission.
Go, most popular in countries such as China, South Korea and Japan,
involves two contestants moving black and white stones across a
square grid, aiming to seize the most territory. Its origins date
back thousands of years.
The board game is favored by AI researchers because of the large
number of outcomes compared to other games such as western chess.
According to Google there are more potential positions in a Go game
than atoms in the universe. [http://bit.ly/2q5eogo]
AlphaGo made history when it beat a top South Korean professional
player last year.
(Reporting by Cate Cadell; Writing by Adam Jourdan; Editing by
Muralikumar Anantharaman)
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