All mathematics on the Internet, its related data and algorithms, should be in “AI and human usable” form

All mathematics on the Internet, its related data and algorithms, should be in “AI and human usable” form

Weijie Su @weijie444 , Han Zhao @hanzhao_ml :

Much is being done. But, like you, people say something and do not work together hard and long enough to make it work for all 5.4 Billion humans using the Internet and 2.8 Billion more human dependents.

The AI algorithm has some mathematics, but that mathematics is a tiny tiny tiny tiny part of what is possible and already exists. And it is embedded in an incompatible computer language and publishing framework that serves neither computing, nor mathematical well. Nor any STEMC group well. These AIs are mostly statistical indexes to raw data. That data is free (not curated, verified, references, accessible, usable).  Nor 8.2 Billion humans trying to survive.

These AIs are mostly statistical indexes to raw data. That data is free (not curated, verified, references, accessible, usable) and the AI groups are scabbing it from raw, unverified and non-indexes sources that are often copied from copyrighted sources. Much of the content has authors that are simply not given credit, nor accessible because they do not know how.

For the Internet Foundation, I would like to translate all mathematics content now embedded in “paper” formats into one standard form. Essentially compile all math so it is a living system. Now all mathematics on the Internet is ‘paper” for the most part, requiring humans and AIs to compile, interpret, usually re-engineer and transform into tools for use.

The commercial firms are greedy. Wikipedia could care less. Open sharing preprint sites do not seem to know how. Governments could care less, “we are not getting paid to share in forms that people can actually use”. I have read countless excuses. The mathematicians get paid for memorizing how to move symbols on paper and they do not want others to know how?

2 billion kids now are learning for the first time and they are forced to do paper mathematics without calculators and computers or AIs or data curated and stored so the math parts are well coded and immediately usable by all. The people writing in computer languages do not seem to know that computer calculations and algorithms can be shown in universal form that is easy to see and use.

It is possible, but it means, since most of the solid data is in copyrighted papers, and human minds, a global open system that links humans to humans, supports open collaboration and does not allow AI groups to only rely on scabbing and statistically indexing the words and strings from free stuff on the Internet. Then they do not trace their sources and methods.
 
I am only writing the tip top of something I have been working on for several decades. There are countless things going on. I try to find the core issues and correct them. Identifying and using mathematics on the Internet where ever it occurs is one.
 
Look at “all papers on the Internet”, “all equations on the internet”, “all units and dimensions on the internet”, “all software on the internet”, “all human languages on the Internet”, “all videos related to STEMC (add computers) on the internet”, “all datasets and live data streams on the internet”, “all calculators and word problem solvers on the internet” and thousands more that I have been mapping out on the Internet working every day for the last 26 years.

Richard Collins, The Internet Foundation

Richard K Collins

About: Richard K Collins

The Internet Foundation Internet policies, global issues, global open lossless data, global open collaboration


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