27 Data Science & AI articles from June 2023

An argument for bigger quantum neural networks

In-orbit demonstration of a re-trainable machine learning payload for processing optical imagery

7 ways ChatGPT makes you code better and faster

Are data scientists still needed in the age of generative AI? Not according to this opinion piece

Making Predictions: A Beginner’s Guide to Linear Regression in Python

Air Force studying ‘military applications’ for artificial intelligence like ChatGPT  

24 articles worth reading about the dangers of AI (beyond security issues)

Open-source AI chatbots are booming

A hacking conference (DEF CON 31) has invited hackers to find bugs and biases in AI  

9 articles worth reading about the security dangers of AI

Neural Networks need data even fake data to learn: Why researchers turn to synthetic data to train their artificial intelligence systems

China tests first-ever low-Earth orbit constellation to rival SpaceX's Starlink

Intelligence analysts confront the reality of deepfakes  

The NGA is hailing the value of AI tools & machine learning to analyze 1000s of satellite images

How the rise of low Earth orbit satellites can disrupt how militaries fight

Space Force reconsiders the use of the Global Positioning System constellation

USGIF white paper on GEOINT opportunities created by AI related to synthetic training data

A look at how the commercial satellite economy got to where it is today

Mastering the art of data storytelling: A guide for data scientists

A system based on Google DeepMind’s AlphaZero AI can create algorithms that will sort data faster than algorithms built by people

A visual introduction to neural networks

Asking ChatGPT to write you a malicious code

Mutating malware can be built using the ChatGPT

New US spy satellites to track Chinese, Russian threats in orbit

Five ways to help your data science team collaborate more effectively

Many commercial-satellite operators are still creating overly ambitious plans

NGA: AI has come a long way but “not good enough” to justify a pause in development