[1]: https://indico.bnl.gov/event/10699/contributions/53933/attac...
The data captured, stored, processed, and evaluated after just one of their more notable experiments generate petabytes of data.
They know a thing or two that directly apply.
Someone please correct me if I understood it wrong.
https://knowledgetransfer.web.cern.ch/kt-fund/projects/novel...
...is too much money, then I'm glad: you probably don't have cancer!
CERN's side projects gave us WWW for example, so you could write your comment.
Obviously we're not there yet but many people in the world have access to no medical care or only expensive and crappy medical care.
That would be a glorious day because most doctors are spectacularly bad at it. It will never happen though because the medical establishment is very protective, and will never allow it if using one's health insurance.
Meanwhile, I have a corresponding Custom GPT that I find useful: https://chatgpt.com/g/g-Myvb8o0yb-medical-lab-tests-advisor
A lot of technology gets entrenched using such mechanisms even though its benefits are questionable. Genetic engineering, what could go wrong? But think of the sick children?
Not knocking what these people are trying to do, but I do think that if you add up all the positives and negatives of AI, the negatives far outweigh the positives.
https://investors.modernatx.com/news/news-details/2024/Moder...
> offers hospitals its experience in managing huge amounts of data in a secure and decentralized way, which is key to ensuring the privacy and security of the private patient information used to feed the algorithm. [...] uses a system to process data locally without sending it to central storage. This helps protect privacy and make better use of resources when different hospitals work together to create reliable AI-based models
Which probably makes sense why CERN developed some expertise in this area.