Advanced technological solutions could offer an answer to the
challenges of safety and security in supply chains by allowing shippers to know
their logistics partners better. Information
is key and with the internet awash with data, and both trusted and reliable a
method to rapidly sift through this information quagmire, and to discard poor quality
data in favour of valuable trusted material can offer invaluable support to
companies with long supply chains with distant partners.
Safety and security in supply chains often comes down to knowing those
that you are co-operating with, and when it is not possible to drill down to
small suppliers, AI systems can recognise and link regional events or
activities that may have caused issues within supply chains... Identifying
regional suppliers of charcoal, often small holdings, can alert companies to potential
problems.
Recognising localised challenges is one
positive attribute of collecting, analysing and storing AI data, but the more readily available data on
larger companies can offer alternative insights into supply chain partners,
including managerial changes, financial developments and mergers and
acquisitions.Information collected globally, analysed and cross-referenced by
AI could give supply chain operators critical information early on distant
partners, engendering trust in those partners.
One such company offering a data mining service is Semantic Visions
(SV), based in the Czech Republic’s capital, Prague, SV has developed an AI
based system that seeks data on particular companies and regions that will
offer insights for business partners. Julius
Rusnak, SV’s COO, told Seatrade Maritime News that the company has the
capability to download and process 2 million data pieces per day - that is news
articles, blogs open-source data and proprietary data. “We have our own
database of companies that we continuously enrich with data and interconnect
these companies stored in our database with events and with the relationships
between them. And we also make sure that
we recognise if the source is writing about a particular company or a brand in
general,” explained Rusnak. SV’s system has the capability to search in
multiple languages and is backed by a multilingual team, searching items in
Spanish, Chinese, German, Italian, French, Japanese and English among other
languages. This team “understands the intricacies
and differences in cultures and happenings in different parts of the globe”,
said Rusnak, adding that the company does not merely rely on machines to
analyse data.
Rusnak concedes that to identify a business a company must have an
internet presence.... “We are experts at recognising events,” said Rusnak, “We not only use the latest, machine
learning, but we also use our vast ontology that we constructed before the
ontake of technology.
This database of more than 600 predefined events and their history,
which have occurred around the world.... According to Rusnak an AI system is capable of describing
opportunities and recognising “patterns and meanings and semantic structures in
the text” which means that the AI system is “good at recognising what’s going
on”....
The goal of an AI data source is to give customers filtered and
structured information that effectively cuts out the ‘noise’ around an event. In
effect, said Rusnak, “We take a vast
amount of information in its unstructured form and convert it into high value
data in a very structured form.”Rusnak explains that while AI can offer tools
in certain instances, it will be down to the reader to interpret the data that
is being presented. One illustration of this was SV’s Russian reports, which
saw, what Rusnak describes as “sentiment”, stable for some years then one year
ahead of the invasion “sentiment towards Ukraine skyrocketed crazily,” he said.
“It doesn't mean that we were able to
make that conclusion, towards what actually happened in the world,” he
explained, “But analysts that had the
report in their hands, they would have been able to draw their own conclusion.
So, I say, we don't interpret this stuff per se, we provide the data.”