Google’s DeepMind Health, its medical-focused artificial intelligence (AI) engine, has stitched a deal with the UK’s National Health Service (NHS), to provide a trio of London hospitals with the Streams mobile app – designed to assist medical professionals in the early detection of acute kidney injury (AKI). Members of the general public and NHS employees alike are up in arms about data privacy issues, which is not wholly surprising considering Google’s core business is selling advertising. What’s more, Google says it will only be receiving a small initial fee from the NHS for the software (that’s taxpayer money) and will largely monetize its operations by receiving a sort of bonus (more taxpayer money) per successful case of early AKI detection.…