


– Daniel Acheson
Saturday April 2, 2016
Saturday April 2, 2016
Thursday March 31, 2016
As AlphaGo finished playing the first round of its historic matches against Lee Sedol, news media around the world was reaching out to go organizations around the world. In the US there was a large number of print and internet publications. In three cases AlphaGo was talked about on TV for the US. The Daily Show covered AlphaGo and its AI prowess. On March 9th Michael Chen met with Poppy Harlow on CNN’s Quest Means Business on CNN International. During the segment they discussed the importance of the match and some basic of the game (Transcript). On March 10th Andrew Okun was interviewed by Ivan Watson from CNN International about the second loss from the matches. Okun talks about how far go has come to get to this point (Transcript).
– Steve Colburn
Tuesday March 29, 2016
From SNL Korea “AlphaGo” participated in a rap battle vs Block B last weekend. Can AlphaGo master freestyle rap the way it mastered go? Click here for Show Me the AlphaGo Part 1 and Show Me the AlphaGo Part 2.
– Steve Colburn
Saturday March 26, 2016
Did the AlphaGo Match Boost Interest in Go? Has your local go club seen a spike in interest in go? The Korean Baduk Association is looking for data on AlphaGo’s effect in the US, reports American Go Association president Andy Okun. “I suspect that it is not merely academic or journalistic interest,” says Okun. “In years past, KBA and KABA have used information like this to argue for private and government resources to promote baduk around the world. The value of something interesting could be significant and pretty soon.” Email Okun at president@usgo.org
The Daily Show Covers Go: While reporting on artificial intelligence, Ronny Chieng investigates a Google program called AlphaGo, which has mastered the Chinese strategy game Go. (3:45)
Li Zhe 6P on the AlphaGo-Lee Sedol Match: The Massgoblog has published three articles by Li Zhe 6P on the recent AlphaGo-Lee Sedol match. The former National Champion of China scored seven consecutive wins in the 2007 Chinese Weiqi League A, including wins against Lee Sedol and Gu Li and in 2013 made the top four in the LG Cup. He’s currently studying philosophy at Beijing University. The essays are Lee Sedol’s Strategy and AlphaGo’s weakness; Nobody could have done a better job than Lee Sedol and Before Game 5. Translation by Yi Tong, Michael Chen and Chun Sun.
How the Computer Beat the Go Master
Scientific American
Garlock & Pinkerton Discuss AlphaGo Match on “World’s Finest Show”
Compilation of international publications about AlphaGo
Sunday March 20, 2016
AlphaGo and Artificial Intelligence: One may easily imagine a future in which the only available careers are as artists, mathematicians, and prostitutes. One may imagine a slightly more distant future where even these careers have been automated. (Huck Bennett)
AlphaGo and the future of Artificial Intelligence
BBC Newsnight
Reddit “Ask Me Anything” with six go professionals and organizers who were involved with the match in Korea last week between Google’s AlphaGo AI and Lee Sedol 9p: Michael Redmond 9p; Myungwan Kim 9p; Hajin Lee 3p; Andy Okun (AGA President); Chris Garlock (AGA VP Communications, commented games on the official Deepmind stream); Andrew Jackson (AGA VP Operations, commented games on the AGA stream)
BBC World News interview with Francis Roads
Achievement Unlocked: Google AlphaGo A.I. Wins Go Series, 4-1
NPR
Don’t Forget Humans Created The Computer Program That Can Beat Humans At Go
FiveThirtyEight
“Sedol is my champion” tees available; Stefano Giurin has released a tshirt commemorating the first — and only — game won by Lee Sedo against AlphaGo. Click here for details.
The New York Gambit
Not about go or AlphaGo but an interesting read.
The New York Times
South Korea trumpets $860-million AI fund after AlphaGo ‘shock’
Nature
AlphaGo and the Limits of Machine Intuition
Harvard Business Review
Five Lessons from AlphaGo’s Historic Victory
MIT Technology Review
Why AlphaGo Is Not AI
IEEE Spectrum
Saturday March 19, 2016
The complete SGF game records for the incredible display of go prowess from the recent AlphaGo vs. Lee Sedol 9p match appear below:
AlphaGo vs. Lee Sedol 9p, Game 1
AlphaGo vs. Lee Sedol 9p, Game 2
AlphaGo vs. Lee Sedol 9p, Game 3
AlphaGo vs. Lee Sedol 9p, Game 4
AlphaGo vs. Lee Sedol 9p, Game 5
The E-Journal has extensively covered this now world famous historic match. For a starting point on post-match coverage and references, click on this E-Journal article .
For extensive and insightful commentary on the games, also visit the YouTube channel: AlphaGo vs. Lee Sedol 9p , in which Michael Redmond 9p analyzes every facet of the games with E-Journal Editor Chris Garlock.
Friday March 18, 2016
Chris Garlock will discuss the AlphaGo-Lee Sedol match Friday March 18 on the “World’s Finest Show” on WCHE 1520 AM, tune in worldwide via the listen live button at the top. Garlock commented the match with Michael Redmond 9P.
In Two Moves, AlphaGo and Lee Sedol Redefined the Future
Wired
AlphaGo seals 4-1 victory over Go grandmaster Lee Sedol
The Guardian
Game over! AlphaGo takes the final victory against Go champion Lee Sedol to finish the $1 million contest 4-1
The Daily Mail
AlphaGo defeats Lee Sedol 4–1 in Google DeepMind Challenge Match
GoGameGuru
What we learned in Seoul with AlphaGo
– Demis Hassabis, CEO and Co-Founder of DeepMind
Thursday March 17, 2016
Wednesday March 16, 2016
The Arizona Go Club met at Old Chicago Restaurant for pizza and wings “to view the burial of human superiority in go, otherwise known as Game 3 of the AlphaGo v. Lee Sedol match,” reports Martin Lebl. “Viewing was successful, although humanity lost, as many have predicted after game 1 and game 2 of the match.” Having watched the first two games at Denny’s, the viewing party for the deciding game was upgraded to Old Chicago “due to their better tasting food, and availability of appropriate liquid refreshments for a wake,” Lebl adds. “The final burial came at 1:30 local time, when AlphaGo decisively proved not only could it fight complicated ko fight, but would convert it into more complicated and bigger ko fight in the process, if given half a chance. Fun was had by all.”
“Here’s a picture of us watching game two of the incredible Alphago vs. Lee Sedol match at Noisebridge hackerspace (left) in San Francisco,” reports Mishal Awadah. The SF Go club is
offering a 10 week beginners go class starting on March 20th for anyone interested in learning the game.
And Lee Schumacher sent in this shot of a watch party at the Google Mt. View campus (right).