Japan: AI Systems Can Use Any Data, from Any Source – Even Illegal Ones
While other countries are mulling where to put the brakes on AI development, Japan is going full steam ahead, with the government recently announcing that no data will be off-limits for AI.
In a recent meeting, Keiko Nagaoka, Japanese Minister of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology, confirmed that no law, including copyright law, will prevent AIs from accessing data in the country.
AIs will be allowed to use data for training, “regardless of whether it is for non-profit or commercial purposes, whether it is an act other than reproduction, or whether it is content obtained from illegal sites or otherwise,” said Nagaoka.
The decision is a blow to copyright holders who argue that AI using their intellectual property to produce new content undermines the very concept of copyright.
The Biden Administration’s leftist regulators at the FTC, meanwhile, worry that “historically biased” data (such as crime data with racial imbalances) will lead to outcomes that conflict with “civil rights.” Many leftist agitators in the west want to cut off AIs from such data.
There will be no such restrictions in Japan, if the government sticks to the policy laid out by Nagaoka.
Japan: AI Systems Can Use Any Data, from Any Source – Even Illegal Ones
While other countries are mulling where to put the brakes on AI development, Japan is going full steam ahead, with the government recently announcing that no data will be off-limits for AI.
In a recent meeting, Keiko Nagaoka, Japanese Minister of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology, confirmed that no law, including copyright law, will prevent AIs from accessing data in the country.
AIs will be allowed to use data for training, “regardless of whether it is for non-profit or commercial purposes, whether it is an act other than reproduction, or whether it is content obtained from illegal sites or otherwise,” said Nagaoka.
The decision is a blow to copyright holders who argue that AI using their intellectual property to produce new content undermines the very concept of copyright.
The Biden Administration’s leftist regulators at the FTC, meanwhile, worry that “historically biased” data (such as crime data with racial imbalances) will lead to outcomes that conflict with “civil rights.” Many leftist agitators in the west want to cut off AIs from such data.
There will be no such restrictions in Japan, if the government sticks to the policy laid out by Nagaoka.
https://www.breitbart.com/economy/2023/06/01/japan-ai-systems-can-use-any-data-from-any-source-even-illegal-ones/
.On the tech front, Japan is considered the leader in the field of robotics, but perhaps a lesser known fact is that they were the second nation after Canada to adopt a national AI strategy, something they released in March of 2017. The strategy focuses primarily on AI applications for productivity, health, and mobility. We scoured Crunchbase to find the most funded AI startups in the Japanese ecosystem as of today.
Preferred Networks
Founded in 2014, Tokyo startup Preferred Networks has raised $130 million from the likes of Toyota, Hitachi, and Fanuc to apply machine learning to Internet of Things (IoT) use cases. Their latest funding round put a $2 billion price tag on the four-year-old startup making it Japan’s only unicorn according to the experts over at CB Insights. The startup’s only public products are an automated manga coloring tool and some opensource developer materials for neural network frameworks. The company’s core activities center around autonomous vehicles, machine learning for robots and machine tools, and medical diagnostics.
Preferred Networks is relatively tight-lipped about what they’re up to, and that’s no surprise given that they’ve become an outsourced AI research lab for some major-league partners like Toyota, Fanuc, and the National Cancer Center of Japan. Preferred Networks also launched one of the most powerful private sector supercomputers in Japan last year in partnership with NTT Communications Corp. As Bloomberg rightfully puts it, “what sets Preferred Networks apart from the hundreds of other AI startups is its ties to Japan’s manufacturing might.”
Abeja
Founded in 2012, Tokyo startup Abeja has raised $45.4 million from a list of investors that include Google and Nvidia to develop big data analytics based on IoT sensor data. The company has built an analytics platform that can be integrated into virtually any business with enough data to be crunched for producing valuable insights. Abeja is also offering specific products optimized for use in retail, manufacturing, and infrastructure on the back of their core platform.
The structure and data flow of Abeja’s AI platform – Credit: Abeja
The retail solution analyzes in-store customer behavior to optimize business and inventory management. The manufacturing module improves production efficiency by automating product inspection and predicting machinery failures. The infrastructure offering prevents breakdowns by detecting possible malfunctions and scheduling maintenance, something we talked about recently. Abeja is now planning to expand to foreign markets like China and Thailand with localized versions of its analytics service.
Ascent Robotics
Founded in 2016, Tokyo startup Ascent Robotics has raised $17.9 million to develop software for autonomous cars and industrial robots. Ascent’s approach is built on their AI learning architecture called Atlas. The company says it is the “skeleton” on which AI training simulations work and is equipped with models generating real-life environments, situations, and feedback in a virtual setting, basically teaching AI algorithms how to behave. With the mix of real and simulated data, the AI’s learning efficiency is reported to be 50 times higher compared to when only real-life data is being used. Ascent wants to create a fully autonomous (level 4) vehicle software by late 2020, after which the company is reportedly planning an IPO. The startup has Ken Kutaragi, former Sony Computer Entertainment CEO and creator of the PlayStation on its board, and is planning a new investment round of $30-50 million in the coming months.
Cinnamon
Founded in 2012, Tokyo startup Cinnamon has taken in a total of $17 million with their latest round of $6 million closing just days ago. Covered earlier in our article on “7 Startups Using AI for Robotic Process Automation,” Cinnamon offers a smart scanner algorithm with Optical Character Recognition (OCR) that can read and understand text and handwriting. The Flax Scanner can process virtually any type of document in a matter of seconds with an accuracy of 99.2%, saving up administrative and support staff for more value-added activities. The company has offices in Japan and Vietnam, and is going to use its latest funding round to expand into the U.S.
LeapMind
Founded in 2012, Tokyo startup LeapMind has raised $13.5 million in funding from the likes of Intel to develop embedded deep learning solutions on edge devices. Edge computing means that computations are performed on distributed devices like smartphones or sensors, and not in a centralized cloud environment. This removes the need for cloud connectivity, provides optimized performance, and allows for quicker communication with local communications hubs called nodes.
LeapMind’s Delta suite of products provides the hardware, the data labeling, and training framework, and the deep learning model builder to create and deploy deep learning models on edge devices without background knowledge in programming.
The company claims their model builder reduces the three-month process of model design, training, compression, and conversion to just one day. Use cases include automated inspections on food production lines, identifying construction anomalies using drone or fixed-point camera images, and analyzing market trends based on online image analytics.
Cogent Labs
Founded in 2015, Tokyo startup Cogent Labs has raised $12.9 million to develop AI solutions for natural language understanding, character recognition, and time series forecasting. The company’s Tegaki Optical Character Recognition (OCR) app targets the most common job being replaced by AI – the file clerk – and has a handwriting recognition rate of 99.22%, similar to Cinnamon above. It is only available for Japanese language, and Cogent has signed up mammoth conglomerate Softbank as one of its clients.
Features of Cogent’s natural language understanding algorithms – Credit: Cogent Labs
The Kaidoku natural language understanding engine uncovers insights from text-based data like news, social media streams, and documents. It provides overview, filter, and search functions, as well as visualizations across time. The company’s time-series forecasting algorithms analyze large amounts of historical data to come up with long- and short-term forecasts in situations where traditional statistical models usually fail. This is useful for applications such as securities trading, and the startup’s client list includes one of the country’s biggest investment banks, Nomura.
Moneytree
Click for company websiteFounded in 2012, Tokyo startup Moneytree has raised $10.5 million to develop a financial data aggregation platform for individual consumers and corporates. Users can register bank accounts, credit cards, and other accounts like securities holding accounts or loyalty cards, and Moneytree pulls their transactions and assets into its platform automatically. Data is saved for the lifetime of the membership, providing valuable historical information as well as current analytics.
How Moneytree’s MT Link for service providers works – Credit: Moneytree
The company also offers an automated corporate expense registration and reimbursement service working along the same principles, and an integration service for financial companies called MT Link. The platform currently covers 2,600 service providers across the country.
Mujin
Founded in 2011, Tokyo startup Mujin has raised $7 million in funding to develop AI-based motion control software for industrial robots. While robots are traditionally programmed to perform certain tasks or movements, Mujin’s controllers allow robots to “think” through their movements without any pre-programming, adjusting to reality as they go along, much like most humans do.
The company doesn’t build robots but provides the controllers which are compatible with most of the robots being manufactured today. Mujin’s solutions are mainly used in logistics, warehousing, and factory automation for picking, packing, and sorting tasks. The startup has developed the world’s first warehouse without any human staff in partnership with JD.com, the Chinese e-commerce powerhouse. Seems like it’s only a matter of time before some of the biggest warehousing robot manufacturers will look to implement Mujin’s advanced motion control technology into their machines.
Alpaca
This next startup we’ve come across before twice; first in our article on 6 Startups Using AI for Algorithmic Trading Strategies and second in our article on Free Algo Trading for Tech-Savvy Traders. Founded in 2016, Tokyo Startup Alpaca has raised $5.8 million to develop predictive models for financial markets and offer the world’s first free algo trading platform. The startup’s AlpacaForecast AI Prediction Matrix uses AI to calculate short-term price forecasts for certain currency pairs, equities, and fixed income instruments. The matrix comes in the form of a dashboard and plugs into everyone’s favorite financial data provider, Bloomberg. The broader AlpacaForecast framework is built with ultra-high speed data storage technology, designed by Alpaca from scratch, and optimized for financial time series. The company is working with regional and local banks like Jibun Bank and MUFG Bank, the largest bank in Japan.
Update 10/16/2020: Alpaca has raised $10 million in Series A funding to continue building out their platform. This brings the company’s total funding to $21.8 million to date.
MJI
Founded in 2015, Tokyo startup MJI (which stands for More Joyful Innovation) has raised $5 million to develop a virtual assistant called Tapia. The tool looks like a kawaii version of Google’s virtual assistant or Amazon’s Alexa and offers all the necessary functionalities you’d expect. It has voice and facial recognition capabilities, and is able to make calls, organize your schedule, read news, and play music. It also acts as a safety monitoring device you can use to check on your loved ones requiring assistance.
The startup has released a development toolkit for companies wanting to expand Tapia’s original functionality as well. MJI has also developed a home medical assistant called “anco,” based on Tapia’s hardware, and in collaboration with the NTT group. “anco” can gather and share information from vital signs reading equipment like thermometers and blood pressure monitors, diagnose patients based on real conversation, and provide remote support from nurses. Sounds like maybe they should partner with another firm we looked at called Qolty which is using big data to improve medical studies.
Conclusion
Many of these startups are developing generic AI technologies applicable to many use cases across many industries. This ties in well with the national AI strategy that envisions a whole ecosystem of AI algorithms speaking to each other by 2030 – something you’d expect from a collective society.
If we happened to “miss” your Japanese AI startup because you were too busy playing pachinko to update Crunchbase, we know you won’t say anything because you are far too polite to complain. Just drop us a note instead and the next time we’re in Tokyo – the town where all the cool startups seem to hang out – we’ll take you to Omoide Yokocho and you can tell us all about what you’re getting up to.
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With generative artificial intelligence rapidly gaining traction around the world, Japanese firms ranging from SoftBank to Hitachi are developing or incorporating the technology into their businesses. At the same time, the government is working toward crafting a national AI strategy.
Following the public debut of Microsoft-backed OpenAI’s ChatGPT last November, global tech giants such as California-based Google and China’s Baidu have rolled out their own AI-powered chatbots, but Japanese firms have been conspicuous in their absence.
Still, the nation’s companies are beginning to make their presence felt, with SoftBank’s mobile unit declaring earlier this month that it will develop a Japanese equivalent of ChatGPT.
Line, which is Japan’s most popular messaging app provider and is co-owned by SoftBank and South Korea-based Naver, has been developing AI, with the parent company intending to invest more in this technology, SoftBank CEO Junichi Miyakawa said during a news conference last week.
“The SoftBank and Line alliance has been discussing what we need to do to catch up with OpenAI,” he said.
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