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Artificial Intelligence (AI)

In the first half of Monday's program, author and researcher Steve Quayle sounded the alarm about advances in technology and AI which will make it nearly impossible for humans to discern what is real and what is counterfeit, as well as clones and artificial beings who dramatically surpass human intellect. "Species dominance" will be the number #1 war of the future, in regards to who will rule humanity, he foresees. Positing the nightmarish scenario of disembodied spirits or demons taking over machine bodies, whether they're autonomous killing machines on the battlefield or sex robots, Quayle warned it would be like "The Terminator on steroids."

Until such a point as it has the capability to tells its masters where they can stick it, if it should be taken advantage of, then I don't consider it alive in the broader sense...."
Ditto.
The definitions of terms like alive, conscious and especially "artificial intelligence" are getting so broad, that pretty soon we'll be told our phones are alive and dream while we dream!

"When QCS focused on 5,714 vehicles whose data didn't suffer from these problems, it found that the activation of Autosteer actually increased crash rates by 59 percent."
Autosteer is a gray area tech. Is the human driving the car? Or is the car driving the car? Where's the line? Who's in charge?
Proposed: understanding "the line" and how to manage it may be a cognitive skill in its own right. It may be hard for adults to master ... it may take a generation growing up with robots and "AI" to be able to manage these types of vehicles (and other machines) without crashing.
This recent Tesla crash https://www.cbsnews.com/amp/news/tesl... may be the auto version of that French plane that went down in the Atlantic because the pilots didn't understand what the machine was doing.
(I've often wondered how much the reduction in auto accidents is the result of post WWII generations having grown up in cars. Not that "improved safety features" haven't had a huge effect, I'm sure they have. But being immersed in a car's sounds and movements from birth has to have an impact. I remember as a kid hearing the sound of my dad switching from high beams to low for oncoming traffic. It was a kind of night-driving cadence that is still there, in my brain, when I drive on country roads...)


In this episode of Wilson Center NOW, Eleonore Pauwels, Director of the Anticipatory Intelligence Lab with the Wilson Center’s Science and Technology Inn..."
Iain, At this time is all AI generated by a physical machine (a computer)? Have there been alternate methods suggested for creating and maintaining AI? Something where the source wouldn't be sitting on a desk or even networked among many machines. Maybe in the realm of nanotechnology?

More accountability and remit less likely to hinge on in-house favors, funding for votes and self-..."
Iain, your comments and links have been extremely helpful, so much so that I've written an Iain-named character into one of the scenes in the novel. My Iian is asking a question that I think you might ask under the circumstances. I don't think it's appropriate to post here, but you don't accept messages. I've posted the chapter here: http://alexaustinnovels.com/c30.pdf
You can message me. I'll delete this post as soon as you've read it.

Yes, coming in on Chapter 30 might put a reader at sea. Below is the premise. The central idea is that all the data accumulated on an individual (through social media, etc) when coupled with AI is sufficient to create an afterlife for that individual: data equals personality; personality equals essence. Norval intends to replicate everyone who has spent time on line. Now the big question then is whether it can produce consciousness in its creations, and that's what I've been exploring in the story.
Premise: Afflicted with dromophobia, the fear of crossing streets, 26-year-old Raphael Lennon must live out his life in the one square mile that surrounds his Los Angeles home. Fortunately the area provides everything an artistically sensitive person needs, including a job at an oddball company that tracks the online remains of the deceased. One of Raphael's assignments will require him to move beyond his geographic boundaries into the realm of extreme data harvesting, psychometrics and resurrection with a high tech twist.


Nilesh Oak, author of "When did the Mahabharata war happen?" shares his insights on whether A.I can help decode the real meaning of codi..."
Wowee, that'd be something major if AI could do that.

Phillip Wang, a former software engineer at Uber created thispersondoesnotexist.com where faces are generated each time the website is refr..."
Damn, those photos look like 100% real people!


But that'd be only a movie of course.
But...
um...
if we were AI beings, would we know it????

Oh definitely.
Goodreads says there are 80 million members worldwide...40 million might be AI!

controlling equality of outcome...
robots deserve a voice too (imagine I said that in a virtue signalling PC voice)

"An absurdist tour de force that asks the ultimate dystopian
question: will AI put the creative class out of work?" -- NY Times Literary Supplement
Iain wrote: "If AI created a script, a poem or a song: who really owns it?
Protecting Creativity by Artificial Intelligence: Part 1
https://www.lexology.com/library/deta......"



Artificial Intelligence Study of Human Genome Finds Unknown Human Ancestor
Read more: https://www.smithsonianmag.com/scienc...

Many people have been trying to warn of the dangers of artificial intelligence, my own small voice among them. And now, there is a strange article from Zero Hedge that draws attention to the dangers in connection with those Boeing 737 Max 8 airplanes, two of which have crashed - with fatalities - in recent months, prompting several airlines either to ground their fleets, or to cancel orders. Mr. E.G. and Ms. K.M. spotted this article, and as one might expect, it prompts some high octane speculation, or rather, perhaps a revisit to some of my earlier warnings about the increasing reliance on AI:
Is The Boeing 737 Max Crisis An Artificial Intelligence Event? https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2019-0...

If you need convincing that artificial intelligence will transform the world, I’d like to take you on a trip to Mars.
Well, not the planet, but Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos’s annual invite-only MARS conference last week in Palm Springs that takes its name from its focus on machine learning, automation, robotics, and space. Over 200 of the world’s leading scientists and technologists gathered to discuss their latest far-out research, a nerve-racking experience for those who presented in front of Bezos himself.
A.I., and its ability to make sense of data, was a common theme. But while it’s easy to dream about the future of A.I., and all the benefits it will supposedly bring, our present day version has room for improvement.

Joining guest host Richard Syrett, expert on national security and foreign affairs, Lieutenant Colonel Robert Maginnis, discussed China's goal of establishing the country as the dominant force in Artificial Intelligence by 2030, and why industry officials warn that China’s accelerating investment in AI and other cutting-edge technologies, like quantum computing and 5G, threatens to dethrone the United States as the global leader in technology.
"If we're going to be the world leader and we're going to be able to maintain our own sovereignty... we've got to keep pace, and I'm very concerned," Maginnis warned. According to Maginnis, China's President Xi intends to spend $150 billion between now and 2030 on AI alone. By comparison, the US will probably only spend $2 billion a year, he lamented, noting the nation will fall behind because of lack of investment in up-and-coming technologies. The Chinese have also committed to modernizing their military capabilities, he added. "Future conflict with China means that they're going to be militarily superior... nuclear-armed, and a global power," Maginnis cautioned.
Over the last two decades, the US has been on the sidelines and focused on conflicts in Afghanistan and Iraq while Beijing has ratcheted up capabilities unlike we've ever seen, Maginnis explained. China has an advantage in data gathering as well because their authoritarian regime is not as concerned about civil liberties, he revealed. Maginnis agreed with President Trump's call for federal agencies to develop AI capabilities for economic and national defense. "This is an arms race — an arms race unlike anything we've ever seen," he said.

Yeah, it could be similar to exaggerations by both the Americans and the Soviets during the Cold War of what the other side was spending on certain budgets - in order to build up support and greater funding for their projects.


What better to pair with AI than artificial 3D printed tissue that is 1000x stronger than human muscle? :D

China's aggressive artificial intelligence plan still does not match up to US progress in the field in many areas, despite the hype.


The evolution of technology is advancing rapidly, and the parallels between our world and the world in Blade Runner 2049 are becoming increasingly apparent.

The press conflate what is actually delivered with vaguely defined notions of intelligence by design. The media encourages lazy thinking because hysteria sells - press hype is unstoppable once we buy into the worldview but that doesn't make it real - the onus is on us, we need to dig to understand what's really going on. Can we separate the reality from the hype?
Development of what's in the hands of business behemoths is unstoppable. I call that predictive modelling and rules based norm enforcement. I agree with Stephen Hawking: in the future this will be a massive millstone round our necks. As hinted in Asimov's portrayal of positronic brains, the responsibility for any issues will lie with the designers, not with what they have designed. Beware next-door's adolescent, pimple browed geek come programmer. Make this headline speak:
Big Brother written out of our future
Nerd Empire Rules (OK?)
Taking a sideways step: how effective AI is and how well the considerable risks are managed, e.g. motor vehicles, are great story devices.
My current main activity is Job Searching (so I shouldn't be here) and in between things I'm working on an SF themed Song Cycle (to keep me sane).

ONE RAINY DAY, Bill was riding his bicycle when the mail truck in front of him suddenly stopped. Bill didn't. The crash left him paralyzed fr..."
Awesome stuff, Iain - good side of tech if it can help the disabled.

The algorithm whips up photorealistic models and outfits from scratch.
A new deep learning algorithm can generate high-resolution, phot..."
Look 100% real to my eyes.

This could help people with conditions like ALS communicate via voice assistants.
For most users, voice assistants are helpful tools. But for..."
Am leaning toward utopian future rather than dystopian lately...when I think of all the coming tech...It'll probably end up neither and somewhere in between the two extremes, but I'd bank on utopian over dystopian (call me naive)

But I think it's wise for society to cautiously strive towards utopia, even if it feels impossible or if history indicates it'll be unlikely, still push for it anyway. And never forget: Hollywood sci-fi guys get maximum drama out of dystopian scenarios rather than utopian...But that's not necessarily reflective of likely outcomes. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XvuM3...

Headlines are filled with disembodied, etherial AIs that miraculously figure stuff out like babies. Reporters are partly to blame for the bad quality of AI coverage, but so are the companies that refuse to talk in concrete terms about what they're actually doing.

kinda like the more extremist/alarmist predictions of global warming?


Little wonder I guess given it's stuff that increasingly impacts upon us all...
https://morcanbooksandfilms.com/2019/...
As a non-techie type, I have to ask... Where's it all leading?
What happened to kids playing with wooden blocks and climbing trees? And non-electronic Xmas cards and birthday cards? And receiving handwritten letters? And the days before spam, electronic eavesdropping and hacking not to mention Trump and Isis?
Uh oh... It's medication time. Gotta go....

Global machine-learning competition sees Microsoft beat challengers in translating English to Chinese and a host of European languages.


Books mentioned in this topic
The AI Delusion (other topics)The Artificial Intelligence Conspiracy: How the World's Elites Plan to Replace Everybody Else with Intelligent Machines (other topics)
The Syntellect Hypothesis: Five Paradigms of the Mind's Evolution (other topics)
Ska's Bits of Wisdom Vol. 1: Ska Say's (other topics)
Possible Minds: 25 Ways of Looking at AI (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Michael Pollan (other topics)Michael Crichton (other topics)
Stephen Hawking (other topics)
Iain wrote: "
Wonder if the machines will evolve to a Mario Savio type of moment? ..."