Information Today, Inc. Corporate Site KMWorld CRM Media Streaming Media Faulkner Speech Technology DBTA/Unisphere
PRIVACY/COOKIES POLICY
Other ITI Websites
American Library Directory Boardwalk Empire Database Trends and Applications DestinationCRM Faulkner Information Services Fulltext Sources Online InfoToday Europe KMWorld Literary Market Place Plexus Publishing Smart Customer Service Speech Technology Streaming Media Streaming Media Europe Streaming Media Producer Unisphere Research



Vendors: For commercial reprints in print or digital form, contact LaShawn Fugate (lashawn@infotoday.com)

Magazines > Information Today > January/February 2024

Back Index Forward
SUBSCRIBE NOW!
Information Today
Vol. 41 No. 1 — Jan/Feb 2024
EDITOR'S NOTE
Five More Years Until Skynet
by Brandi Scardilli


We are in our 25th year of the new millennium now, inching closer to the era when AI will be fully integrated into society and might even overtake humans as the dominant species—if sci-fi properties are to be believed. Google tells me that The Terminator is set in 2029, Upload in 2033, I, Robot in 2035, Bicentennial Man in 2048, and The Jetsons in 2062. Ex Machina (2014), Superintelligence (2020), and Robots (2023) are all set in some ambiguous “near future.” With these sometimes benevolent, sometimes malevolent, uses of AI looming, it’s no wonder we can’t stop talking about it. This issue, Amber Boedigheimer rounds up some facts to keep in mind when using AI in the library on page 17. Marci Wicker talks to someone whose library answered the U.S. Copyright Office’s call for comments about AI on page 21. Mick O’Leary gives his BUDDIE award for Best Unknown Database to a related site on page 23. And Linda Pophal talks to marketers about using voice search on page 30.

On an unrelated note, please welcome Tom Gaylord as Information Today’s new Legal Issues columnist. Get to know him on page 19.

Happy Reading!

Brandi Scardilli

Brandi Scardilli is Editor of Information Today and Newsbreaks. Send your comments about this article to itletters@infotoday.com.
       Back to top