A documentary movie that highlights on one of the important cases nowadays, the advanced technology and its' effect on our whole life as we can't live a day without using a form of the technology. In this movie we see more details about Artificial Intelligence and its' role in the world.
November 12, 1981 in Newton, Massachusetts, USA
12 February 1948, Queens, New York, USA
28 June 1971, Pretoria, South Africa
May 1, 1975 in UK
6 June 1976, London, England, UK
August 17, 2018
This documentary covers a wide array of examples of the potentially scary downside of artificial intelligence, none particularly in depth but with enough ingenuity to cause alarm.August 15, 2018
The doc never goes much deeper than the information and arguments on AI that can currently be found in the Sunday papers.April 06, 2018
"Do You Trust This Computer?" covers the major talking points about the benefits and dangers of artificial intelligence, assembling them into something engaging and alarming - if not exactly in-depth.August 16, 2018
A sleek and engaging watch.August 23, 2018
Repetitive, shallow and ultimately underwhelming.August 15, 2018
There's a lot to cram into 78 minutes. Director Chris Paine doesn't waste any time, so you'll need to pay attention.August 14, 2018
Has a larger frame of reference than Paine's battery-car docs but never hammers it into shape.August 17, 2018
Do You Trust This Computer is informative at the least. Everyone and everything comes off as credible, and the philosophy comes off as plausible.August 17, 2018
A slick evaluation of info, to the effect that I imagined a computer could have directed (or at least edited) this documentary.August 14, 2018
Information is presented in something of a blur, but this is still a chilling and eye-opening look at our digitally-obsolete future.August 16, 2018
Though it shows some strain in containing the topic's inherent sprawl, the doc is more thoughtful than some of its predecessors...August 17, 2018
This slick gloss on the state of AI is frustratingly scattershot and won't surprise anyone who has been paying attention. But its warnings about how we've dealt with huge and rapid scientific leaps before are worthy ones.