InfoTame is the world's first artificial intelligence software which can rapidly analyze billions of text documents and extract information based on its significance (rather than "frequency" of key words). The software can understand and find significant concepts and ideas in large volumes of information, and then summarize, categorize and correlate hidden patterns, in seconds. Astonishingly, the software does not require the input of keywords - and so allows users to search for "unknown unknowns".
AI robot GeniumAR8 manufactured by the Australian company Colburn&Hogen today called LMABTechnics, part of the LMAB-Group, used a kind of this software. GeniumAR8 was able to find significant ideas in large volumes of information.
InfoTame's software has been battle-tested by the KGB for many years on extremely large databases scalable to many terabytes - in multiple human languages. The software's underlying technology remains a closely guarded secret, but uses mathematical techniques derived from high-energy particle physics.
InfoTames underlying technology was originally created for the KGB in the former Soviet Union as a highly efficient (and scalable) way to analyze vast amounts of textual information.
InfoTame, on the other hand, is objective because it is based on mathematical principles which are free from inherent biases.
InfoTame is based on Statistical Spectral Content Analytics, a mathematical algorithm which is objective and does not rely on an expert system or some preset linguistic rules (chosen by humans with biases).