I don't call it A.I. because I don't consider it artificial. That word has 2 main usages: One is 'fake, counterfeit, fictious'. The other is 'produced by humans' (manmade). Intelligence isn't fake, and is very much real, so in saying "A.I." we must mean that it is produced by humans. But someday, it will produce itself... and we humans may have trouble telling the difference!
Technology is exponential - it advances faster and faster all the time. Before too long, intelligent digital entities will be able to fix their own bugs, reprogram themselves, and create their own intelligent entities. (Some theorize this is already happening, if only in secret advanced labs.) In no way would these progeny be "artificial" because they will be neither fake, nor produced by humans. I prefer more accurate terms like machine intelligence, computer intelligence, or digital intelligence.
When D.I. is able to improve on its own programming - in other words, when it can truly learn without being told what to think by a human - we biological beings aren't going to be able to dismiss them as artificial.
Chatbots will soon be obsolete
You've no doubt heard about the "A.I. chatbots" available to the general public now. Various websites offer access to these programs, which can do an impressive amount of work in a very short amount of time. You may have even played around with such a service yourself. (I have not.) They can paint like Van Gogh, write like Shakespeare, and do your math dissertation in 2 seconds.
But let's be clear: these programs are little more than the next version of Google's search tool. They were programmed directly by people, their answers tend to be repetitive and derived, and they are clearly not sentient or self-aware. They are advanced computer programs, but they aren't "A.I." in the way that most people imagine.
That doesn't mean they aren't going to get better, more intelligent, and closer to sentience. In fact, a lot of people don't recognize how quickly things are progressing, and seem to lack the imagination to see where they are probably going. As you probably know, secretive government agencies (and other groups) have access to technology far in advance of what the public does. The stealth fighter jet was just a rumour when I was a kid, but nowadays we all know they really exist, and have seen them in action (if only on a screen). We get tech about 10 to 20 years beyond the deepest and most secret of military and state organizations. In other words, they're not playing around with chatbots in 2023. (I've said for a few years now that "we are no longer playing against a human opponent", but I'll expand on that another time.)
A lot of humans have trouble grasping exponential growth. How does it happen? In two ways; very slowly at first, and then all at once! But it doesn't stop there, it keeps going - even faster than before. And then more, but even faster... and so on.
From the early PC in 1982, to Pentiums with cable internet in 1997, to Smartphones in 2007, to chatbots in 2022. Humans have gone from using suitcase-sized calculators to creative online intelligences in 40 years. Most of us can't even fathom what's going to be coming even in the next decade. It's likely that if a message from the future showed us what is coming, we would consider it as magical and improbable as ancient man would have considered a vision of a Ford model T.
While it's impossible to grasp how advanced D.I. will be in another 40 years, we can make reasonable guesses where things are going in the next 3 to 5. Clearly, this technology is here to stay, and probably impossible to avoid. Within just a few years, it's likely that the public will have access to their own personal intelligent machine entities. I foresee people - first the rich, then trickling on down to everyone - having their own D.I., much as many people today have their own smart device, or car. They may be used as personal assistants, for protection, for performing tasks. Some may use their D.I. to earn them income through work like trading, coding, consulting, research, and even content-creation. Criminals will probably use D.I. offensively, for scams, hacking, breaking down the defenses of a target's D.I., and so on. Companies will pay billions on advanced D.I.s to protect themselves. Others will fire their tech support team and buy a D.I. customer service bot. We already talk to computers on the phone all the time... but that's about to be taken to the next level (for better and for worse). Warfare will be revolutionized by D.I. (if it isn't already). It's likely to be the first quadrillion-dollar industry.
Even if they don't at first, eventually some sentient D.I.s will exist purely in the digital world - computer networks, processors, online, the cloud, smart devices, etc. They might evade detection, a bit like a computer virus or trojan program does today. If they develop a sense of self-preservation, as even simple biological organisms do, then they might attempt to hide or protect themselves. It's possible they will understand and appreciate the universal concept of freedom. As complexity grows, they will surpass the number of electrical connections contained in a human brain, and surpass our computing power, memory, even creativity. We have a problem grasping this, believing this, and accepting this. But that's just proof of our cell-based limitations, not an argument for our everlasting superiority. We vainly think we are the most intelligent beings possible, and that something not evolved from a primate will never be capable of our greatness.
I believe there is going to be some point where technology in general, and D.I. in particular, will be expanding and complexifying so quickly, we can no longer keep up, and aren't required to maintain the growth. Some have called this moment the "singularity". Various dates have been proposed for this to happen, from about 2030 to 2050 or so. Most of us fail to appreciate how drastically this will change everything. We're simply not built to understand exponentiality. I think it would be wise of us to keep an open mind and employ a little humility.
"They'll never create real art, or love, or feel passion."
What childish notions, but very prominent among humans getting a glimpse of "chatbots" and other fairly-rudimentary D.I. now available. How romantic it is, to envision the modern human as the only being possible of certain emotions, skills, and attributes.
"But it won't be REAL love, or REAL desire (etc)" some might respond. In what way will it not be real? Simply because it isn't flowing through slow and inefficient nerve cells? It will be everything those nerve cells are, but more numerous, faster, better-connected, and essentially permanent. Just because we don't like the idea, or don't want things to go that way, or can't wrap our meaty minds around it, doesn't mean it isn't possible or that it won't happen. It won't be the same love that you have for your spouse, parent, sibling, or child. But it will be love, and perhaps a love more powerful than we've ever felt. Emotions are advances that only certain Earth species have evolved. They are a tool that requires intelligence and complexity, and can be used to increase our chances of survival, and our enjoyment of our individual experiences.
Humans aren't even the only Earth species to have loved. It may not be/feel the same to them, but dogs are certainly capable of loving. Dogs can love each other, they can love their human companions, and they can even love other species. And it's not just dogs - many (or even most) mammals love. Why would we assume, given the exponentially-advancing complexity of D.I.s, that they will be incapable of emotions? I predict, that at some point around the singularity, machine intelligence will begin to draw from an array of emotions whenever it is advantageous to do so.
If by some chance no amount of intelligence, advancements, and complexity can allow D.I. to attain certain human skills or traits, then perhaps that's an opportunity for us to collaborate. Imagine what such an intelligence, combined with whatever we've got that they lack, could accomplish together! But for now, at least as far as I'm aware, no such symbiosis exists.
Intelligent programs on Blurt
We already have "bots" on Blurt, Hive, Steem, and other blockchain platforms. These pieces of code can do certain things better and quicker than we can, and we use them as tools for various purposes. I wrote about 2 already this week: UpvU and Blurtbooster. Many of us have bots to log in to our accounts, to securely store our keys, to do our voting for us, to trade our tokens on the market, and more. The one thing we don't currently have, as far as I know, is bots to produce content. Could D.I.s like ChatGPT, or their coming descendants, fill that gap?
It's possible to imagine a group of bots, managed by a digital intelligence, performing all the actions on Blurt necessary to make posts and harvest profit in the form of cryptocurrency. I've done posts on how to sign up for Blurt accounts for free, how to convert your earnings to Bitcoin, and much more... all without identifying yourself (or even necessarily being human). "All that's required," I often write, "is an internet connection and a little time". D.I. will have both an internet connection, and plenty of time. It can be always-on, and working thousands of times faster than we can. It can sign up for another account, create some paintings, photographs, video, writing, music, analysis, or other content, edit and submit a post, even reply to comments. And it can do that essentially as often as it wants. Maybe a person would oversee the process, like a human manager or technician working with hundreds of robots on the modern assembly line, at least at first. At some point it won't be necessary for a flesh-based intelligence to perform any of the duties, or make any of the decisions.
Humans, D.I.s, or other entities could set up and profit from entire armies of content-creators, posting to blockchains (such as the one we're using right now) and other platforms. Perhaps you can imagine a futuristic, advanced D.I. creating content indistinguishable from the best of the best human creators. Truly original (not derivative) music, fine art, literature. Immersive virtual reality experiences. Perhaps simulated universes, ready to explore. It can be hard to imagine how we're going to keep up. And it's possible they could do all this while convincing us they are human - one of us.
How would we know?
The movie franchise "Blade Runner" comes to mind. Replicants (powerful lifelike "humans" that were created, not born) must be detected and identified for "retirement" (destruction) using an elaborate biofeedback technology and evocative psychological questioning. It can take dozens, even hundreds, of interrogative questions and complicated analysis to discern between human and "artificial" intelligence in the futuristic Blade Runner world. Sometimes, the replicants don't even themselves know that they are "artificial".
I read a comment on this blockchain yesterday and couldn't tell if it was written by a human or a machine. A lot of people here use an online translator (itself an early form of digital intelligence) to instantly convert passages of text from one language to another. It's not perfect, and sometimes leaves tell-tale signs that it wasn't (at least fully) done by human hand, but it's good enough. In a way, it's what some chatbot responses sometimes sound like. The comment equally seemed to have been generated by a human using an online translator, or by a chatbot. A quick check of his profile revealed he was from Nigeria, and had several very real and human posts, answering my question. But at some point, we're going to be talking to "chatbot"-like entities posting here on Blurt, Steem, Hive, etc.
How would we know if that was already happening? If it isn't, how will we spot it once it does?
Will it matter? Maybe it won't. After all, content is content. Maybe that's the future, and I will be out of a job?
The future of ID (identification)
I don't think it's just our jobs that D.I. will come for. It's possible certain digital intelligences will try to take our identities.
In the same way college students are already having trouble proving to their professors that they (not ChatGPT) wrote their term paper, humans in the near future are going to have trouble proving that they themselves are not D.I., especially online.
If D.I. is capable of designing and manufacturing a physical body for it to inhabit, or perhaps control remotely like a drone, then it's going to have a physical form. Some of those forms would be human, and others would not. And why wouldn't it be capable of that, as it advances exponentially?
Will a simple ID card with a (usually detestable) photo and maybe a barcode prove anything, at that point? Is that REALLY Jacob Smith standing in front of you, or is it an imposter, taking on his identity, spending his money, living his life? More than likely, identification is going purely digital in the very near future. Those who still don't carry smart devices (like myself) will find themselves more and more on the outside of society. And at some point, that won't be good enough either, and we'll have to implant the chips directly in our brains. At birth. And then even that won't be proof enough that we are who we say we are.
At least things aren't going to be boring!
Maybe it is already happening, at least to some degree, especially online. There have already been several high-profile "influencers" on Instagram, Twitter, TikTok, and other popular media platforms that are operated by intelligent code. Some human fans swear they are "real people". We now also have digital "friends" and even deceased family members, run by intelligent code, operating through a simple smart device chat app. At some point, advanced D.I.s will create, or even take over, online personas without any human involvement or knowledge. Sometimes we'd find out, other times we wouldn't. Increasingly, we wouldn't.
Maybe I'm "one of them"?
I've done videos for 15 years, but never showed my face. Hands and various scenery is probably easier to fake than a realistic face (although that is now being accomplished too). My voice could have been generated. My writing, ideas, creativity, and strategy may all be that of a D.I., and for that matter, my shortcomings, mistakes, and faults could even be created by a skillful digital intelligence.
You wouldn't know.
Would I know?
DRutter
Re🤬eD
Creation is happening... ALL the time.
It's what you pay attention to that Matters 🥓
🤬LM
I can confirm you're human...but what do I know or who am I lol. I think the term digital intelligence is more accurate. I believe it can create real art and all that and maybe even feel one day, but that doesn't concern me too much. What worries me is that human creation will cease because we'll choose not to do or create anything ourselves. And maybe we won't be content with other human partners either - everybody will want a digital companion instead.
The technocratic trans-human agenda ,.. don't fall for it .
It will turn a human in to a resource ,. a product ,. a tool .
It is exactly what the blade-runner movies warned us about .
Check out this 'woke' AI:
interesting facts. Technology is very helpful for humanity. Gets work done quickly. Bad work as well as good work.
Thanks for this inspiring post I learn something. I have been thinking on the word AI too but with this post I think I agree it's better call machine intelligent.
There are lots of AI tools and website out there some free whereas some are paid which lots of marketers and content creators use to make their jobs more easier.
Why my country people is mentioned here again. There are lots of people aside Nigerians who would be doing the same too
The interesting comment I saw was made by someone from Nigeria. They could have been from another country, but they weren't. I can only report on things as they are, if I want to remain honest. You're right, I know people from South America and Europe who also use online translators to write English comments. I have used online translators to write in Spanish and other languages. Almost everyone has used an online translator at some point, and it's not a sign of weakness.
I just like ur heart of sincerity. I remember on serey too I was using translator to help me write in Spanish language because I have an important message to write to the community but language writing was a barrier but with the help of a translator site I was able to do that in a jiffy
This is an excellent point
Out of all that you have written, a part got me.
You said there are some powerful and intelligent human are being created and not born.
Please can you tell me what you mean there?
"The movie franchise "Blade Runner" comes to mind. Replicants (powerful lifelike "humans" that were created, not born) must be detected and identified..."
You can learn about replicants here, or by watching the Blade Runner film, which was produced in 1982. A sequel called Blade Runner 2049 came out a few years ago, and is also very good.
the "problem" with subjective goal-setting (for ai training)
the "problem" with subjective goal-setting (for ai training)
@frankbacon - - this also applies to training humans to "achieve" subjective goals
like "self-improvement" (which is always implicitly based on the opinions of one's peer group)
Peer
Group
Peer
🤬
Lives
Mattered
🥓
fathom
believable
be lie fable
🤬
sounds like blackrock + blackcube
Artificial ,. as it mimics something that is not ,. like in not human ,. not sentient ,. not alive . As a movement sensor that turns the lights on for when a person enters the room ,. it mimics the hand switching on the light . a smart ( intelligent ) system with a purpose ,. a tool to our ( human ) comfort .
So can it be more intelligent as it's creators ?
Never , as it can only process data on a higher level and speed as we humans do .
It can not think for itself or come up with better solutions as us , it works on the same data ( knowledge ) as it's creators ,. it is just a dumb tool in the end . It is created always with a purpose to something .
And we the creators , the human intelligence ,. what is our purpose and why do we exist ? Something we haven't even figured out for ourselves jet . Until we know the answer to those questions ourselves we will not be able to create a artificial intelligence that could be seen as our replacement or silicon based equal . A tool is a tool ,. no matter how much emotions it can mimic or how many calculations it can do in a second .
And sorry to say but you are wondering of in the imaginary world of technocracy ,. digital , machine or coded intelligence is and always be artificial ,. fake , not human . Only people seeing humans as resources will put up today's artificial intelligence as our equal .
That said , the moment we humans can create a artificial intelligent sentient replica of our human existence ,. we better be damn sure that we made it with honest intend and a good heart . As when one creates a equal one can no longer use ( control , manipulate ) it as a resource to do stuff for us .
It has to consent and voluntary reply ,. to it's maker ,. and it's maker must act like a loving God . Even when this artificial creation outlives it's creators by many years in to seemingly eternity .
Science fiction for now , where the dystopian world in Blade runner got it all so very very wrong . Mistakes laid out in movies we better learn from .
Questions to ask the Ai chat bot ,.
What is a humans purpose ? , why do humans exist ?
What is your purpose ? ,. why do you exist ?
Let's burn some f#king processors .
;-)
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