Nvidia and Facebook's Meta to build AI research supercomputer
This is going to be absolutely fine.
Facebook’s rebranded parent company Meta is working with Nvidia to build a massive supercomputer for AI research that probably should terrify us all.
According to an Nvidia Blogpost, the two companies will be working together on what’s been dubbed the Air Research SuperCluster or RSC, and will be the largest NVIDIA DGX A100 customer system yet. The beast is said to deliver 5 exaflops, or 5000000 teraflops of AI performance across thousands of GPUs.
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This big synthetic brain is going to be set to train AI models with more than trillion parameters. A Facebook blog post explains this will be used for things like learning language and identifying harmful content. Given some of Facebook’s questionable decisions in the past, the company could probably use some help making these decisions. A few years back it banned this Fallout 76 group and an advert for the beautiful watercolour videogame Gris for being too sexy. I am still waiting for my own ban for that one, Facebook.
One very neat use suited for this absolute unit of a supercomputer would be to help translate languages. It sounds like the company is aiming for real time translation like having your own babel fish, which is very cool.
“We hope RSC will help us build entirely new AI systems that can, for example, power real-time voice translations to large groups of people, each speaking a different language, so they could seamlessly collaborate on a research project or play an AR game together,” Meta says in the blogpost.
The blogpost also talks about the encryption of the data that will be used with the RSC. It states that there’s processes to anonymise and encrypt data used, and that the system has been built with privacy in mind. Weirdly, this didn’t really make me feel any more secure.
Given the company’s often questionable take on what is and isn’t acceptable on its social media platform, and the seemingly relentless desire to market to and monetise its user base, seeing such a powerful AI computer in Meta’s hands does feel concerning. The UN is already calling for more regulation and transparency around the way AIs are used, and class-action lawsuits, like this one against Google’s DeepMind are surfacing for misuse of data. I can’t be the only one feeling a little bit off about this one.
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Hope’s been writing about games for about a decade, starting out way back when on the Australian Nintendo fan site Vooks.net. Since then, she’s talked far too much about games and tech for publications such as Techlife, Byteside, IGN, and GameSpot. Of course there’s also here at PC Gamer, where she gets to indulge her inner hardware nerd with news and reviews. You can usually find Hope fawning over some art, tech, or likely a wonderful combination of them both and where relevant she’ll share them with you here. When she’s not writing about the amazing creations of others, she’s working on what she hopes will one day be her own. You can find her fictional chill out ambient far future sci-fi radio show/album/listening experience podcast right here. No, she’s not kidding.