'Abuse' What Does It Mean To You?
Society & Culture1 min ago
Classic illustration of function without realisation. I have always hated the term AI anyway and this sort of thing illustrates why perfectly. Clearly it was programmed to encourage his endeavour but not programmed to understand what the endeavour was. Long way to go I think.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I first looked into AI as a research project in the mid-80s. I was not impressed, all marketing hype, nothing at all like intelligence. Although things have moved on since then, I still think the term is misleading - in fact I wonder whether anything non-organic can ever be called intelligence. Applying the artificial prefix attempts to validate the term, but I can't help thinking it's wrong. Chatbots certainly aren't intelligent, they're just human-programmed responses to key words and phrases as far as I can see. The computer isn't doing any real thinking, it's responding to human-programmed stimuli. Just my view, for what it's worth (I admit I've not kept up to date with AI since my original project).
yes canary, what changes is ever more powerful processors and more and more data storage allowing programming to appear more "intelligent". I have always said it should be called psuedo intelligence.
This case illustrates the problem perfectly. The bot spotted a desire and encouraged it. The flaw is that the desire is recognised but not the content of said desire hence the enouragement was the same as if the lad had said something positive. It could have been better than that, the ability does exist, this was clearly a very sloppily programmed bot.
tomus: Nothing has been invented. Better processors and memory have allowed bigger more complex programming that's all. Things can now be programmed that previously could not because of hardware not because the techniques are unknown.
People are right to be worried though, this case illustrates the problems very well.
The Turing test has not been passed:
"No AI has yet successfully passed the Turing test, but some say that AI is getting closer. The Turing test is an experimental method that measures a machine's ability to simulate human behavior. The test is considered passed if a human can't tell if they're speaking to a machine or a human after five minutes of questioning.
In 2014, a chatbot named Eugene Goostman appeared to pass the Turing test at the University of Reading. Goostman was programmed to simulate a 13-year-old Ukrainian boy, and 33% of judges thought it was human. However, some AI experts disputed the result, suggesting that the contest was biased in favor of the chatbot. "
Artificial is the right word but inteligence it is not.
It's quite clear that those who can program computers can recognise what we currently have, those that dont think it is some sort of intelligence.
I agree we are down the line with what we have and no it cant be reversed but it can be legislated against for use in the public domain which is what I think will have to happen.
I cant see proper intelligence coming even in the medium future, it will need a major change in technology.
The Turing test/definition is very flawed and needs updating with what we now know.
One needs an agreed definition of intelligence first and a valid test for it.
If a network of neurons and associated bits & pieces are agreed to be the cause of intelligence in organic brains, then there seems no reason the same could not emerge from a sufficient complex electronic neural network. Biology isn't going to prove to be a magical ingredient; there will be reasons and causes for what it achieves.