CONCEPT
Digital Earth Vision
Gore's 1998 California Science Center vision of AI-driven planetary monitoring — articulated when most Americans had not yet sent an email, now operational in systems like Climate TRACE.
The Digital Earth vision is the concept Al Gore articulated in his 1998 speech at the California Science Center, calling for a system that would use automatic interpretation of imagery, the fusion of data from multiple sources, and intelligent agents that could find and link information to monitor how humans were changing the planet. The speech was delivered when most Americans had not yet sent an email and decades before the technical capabilities it envisioned became feasible. It essentially anticipated AI-driven environmental monitoring two decades before the technology existed. The vision has since been partially realized through systems including Google Earth, NASA's Earth Observatory, and — most operationally relevant — Gore's own Climate TRACE coalition.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The speech's technical prescience is remarkable in retrospect. Gore described automatic interpretation of satellite imagery, which became standard a decade later with advances in computer vision. He described fusion of data from multiple sources, which became the foundation of modern geospatial analytics. He described intelligent agents
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