Benevolence is certainly a non-trivial semantic property of programs, which means we cannot guarantee benevolent AIs. Rice’s theorem states that all non-trivial semantic properties of programs are undecidable. ![]() We cannot guarantee anything about the AI’s behavior due to something known as Rice’s theorem. If we create an all-powerful artificial intelligence, we cannot assume it will be friendly. What we really need is not a Turing test or a Lovelace test, but a Terminator test. The standard Turing test today involves a human and a computer and Read More › 3d-illustration-roboter-auge-stockpack-adobe-stock Type post Author Eric Holloway Date SeptemCategorized Artificial Intelligence Tagged Artificial Intelligence, Eric Holloway, Killer robots, Lovelace test, Rice's theorem, Terminator, Terminator test, Turing Machine, Turing Test Move Over Turing and Lovelace – We Need a Terminator Test More research should be spent on a Terminator test to mitigate the threat of an unfriendly, all-powerful artificial intelligence Eric Holloway Septem4 Artificial Intelligence There are other versions of the game, some of which were suggested by Turing. Turing proposed that a computer take the part of one of the players and the experiment be deemed a success if the interrogators are no more likely to make a correct identification. In 1950 Alan Turing proposed that the question, “Can machines think?,” be replaced by a test of how well a computer plays the “imitation game.” A man and woman go into separate rooms and respond with typewritten answers to questions that are intended to identify the players, each of whom is trying to persuade the interrogators that they are the other person. Is that wise? Gary Smith 8 Artificial Intelligence, Technocracy Will machines someday replace attorneys, physicians, computer programmers, and world leaders? What about composers, painters, and novelists? Will tomorrow’s supercomputers duplicate and exceed humans? Read More › positive-girl-resting-on-the-couch-with-robot-stockpack-adobe-stock Type post Author Gary Smith Date Categorized Artificial Intelligence, Technocracy Tagged Black box algorithms (in decision-making), Blaise Agüera y Arcas, Computer-based decision-making, Gary Smith (on GPT-3), GPT-3 (Gary Smith), LaMDA, Large Language Models (LLMs), Smith test, Turing Test Turing Tests Are Terribly Misleading Black box algorithms are now being trusted to approve loans, price insurance, screen job applicants, trade stocks, determine prison sentences, and much more. Listen now to an excerpt from the second chapter as read by Larry Nobles. Marks is now available in audiobook form. What You Do That Artificial Intelligence Never Will by Mind Matters podcast host Robert J. Marks Novem1ĭownload file | Play in new window | Duration: 19:35 | Recorded on Octo| Speaker: Larry Nobles dweebs), the imitation game, Turing Test An Excerpt from Chapter Two of Non-Computable You Robert J. Marks, Selmer Bringsjord, Swarm intelligence (bullies vs. Marks Date NovemTagged Ada Lovelace, Alan Turing, Algorithms, AlphaGo, chatbots, Eugene Goostman, Non-Computable You (book), Non-Computable You book excerpt, Robert J. But what if we flip the Turing test on its head? Instead of a test where a program tries to pass as human, we use a test Read More › teal-paint-swirl Type podcast Author Robert J. ![]() Thing is, it doesn’t take much to fool us humans! Take Eliza, a program of only a few hundred lines, written in the 60s, which fooled many people into believing it was a real human therapist. The gist is, if a program can fool human testers into believing it is a human, then the program is intelligent. Computer pioneer Alan Turing famously invented a test to determine whether a program could pass as a human. Readers of Mind Matters News have likely heard of the iconic Turing test. TagTuring Test mouse-cursor-clicking-captcha-im-not-robot-checkbox-stockpack-adobe-stock Type post Author Eric Holloway Date NovemCategorized Artificial Intelligence, Censorship, Data Privacy, Philosophy of Mind, Social Media Tagged CAPTCHA, Eliza effect, Featured, Terminator test, Turing Test CAPTCHA: How Fooling Machines Is Different From Fooling Humans Automated censorship is intended to protect against a tidal wave of spam but it could certainly have other uses… Eric Holloway Novem3 Artificial Intelligence, Censorship, Data Privacy, Philosophy of Mind, Social Media
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