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Title:
ChatGPT broke the Turing test
Content:
Other researchers agree that GPT-4 and other LLMs would probably now pass the popular conception of the Turing test. [...]
researchers [...] reported that more than 1.5 million people had played their online game based on the Turing test. Players were assigned to chat for two minutes, either to another player or to an LLM-powered bot that the researchers had prompted to behave like a person. The players correctly identified bots just 60% of the time
Complete contradiction. F*ck Nature, it's become only the most expensive gossip science magazine.
PS: The Turing test involves comparing a bot with a human (not knowing which is which). So if more and more bots pass the test, this can be the result either of an increase in the bots' Artificial Intelligence, or of an increase in humans' Natural Stupidity.
So if more and more bots pass the test, this can be the result either of an increase in the bots’ Artificial Intelligence, or of an increase in humans’ Natural Stupidity.
Or it "simply" plays with human biases, which are very natural. Stuff like seeing faces in everything that somewhat resembles two eyes and a mouth (or sometimes just the eyes and a head like shape etc.) is pretty hard wired. We have similar biases in regards to language. If something reads like it was written by a human, we immediately sympathize with it. Which is also the reason these LLMs are so successful and cause so many people to fear our AI overlords are right around the corner. Simply because the language is good we go into "damn, that's like a human"-mode.
Agree (you made me think of the famous face on Mars). I mean that more as a joke. Also there's no clear threshold or divide on one side of which we can speak of "human intelligence". There's a whole range from impairing disabilities to Einstein and Euler – if it really makes sense to use a linear 1D scale, which very probably doesn't.
Also, the Turing Test isn't some holy grail of AI. It's just a thought experiment, and not even the highest test for an AI that we can think of. Passing it is impressive don't get me wrong, but unlike what clickbait articles would tell you, it does not automatically mean an AI is sentient or is smarter than humans or anything like that. It means it passed the thought experiment, nothing more.
Also also, ChatGPT was not the first AI to pass the Turing Test. Actually, plenty have, even over a decade before.
There is the capitalist alternative to the Turing test: Have ChatGPT get a job. Hook it up to the Web, let it find itself a work-from-home job and go to work. Can it make as much money as a human, can it make enough money to pay for its own survival? Will it get fired?
That just sounds like a recipe for breeding robot sociopaths. It'll find its way into management and doom us all.
Will it get promoted, start managing people, start investing, start its own companies, and quickly take over the world?
If I could have an ai fool a company and earn a check for me, that would be amazing. Unfortunately, I have zero expertise in how to make that happen.
That's not how the system works. If you figure that out, a company will pay you 2 people's wages and will fire 500 with your invention.
Funny I don't see much talk in this thread about Francois Chollet's abstraction and reasoning corpus, which is emphasised in the article. It's a really neat take on how to understand the ability of thought.
A couple things that stick out to me about gpt4 and the like are the lack of understanding in the realms that require multimodal interpretations, the inability to break down word and letter relationships due to tokenization, lack of true emotional ability, and similarity to the "leap before you look" aspect of our own subconscious ability to pull words out of our own ass. Imagine if you could only say the first thing that comes to mind without ever thinking or correcting before letting the words out.
I'm curious about what things will look like after solving those first couple problems, but there's even more to figure out after that.
Going by recent work I enjoy from Earl K. Miller, we seem to have oscillatory cycles of thought which are directed by wavelengths in a higher dimensional representational space. This might explain how we predict and react, as well as hold a thought to bridge certain concepts together.
I wonder if this aspect could be properly reconstructed in a model, or from functions built around concepts like the "tree of thought" paper.
It's really interesting comparing organic and artificial methods and abilities to process or create information.
Please let's not start measuring AI success by how successfully capitalist they can be. I'm not exactly an anti-capitalist, but I think that could only end in tears.
Honestly, though, I even can't decide whether other people have consciousness. Cogito ergo sum, if you know what I'm talking about.
Ironically chatGPT also fails the Turing test by being so competent that no human could match that.
How does ChatGPT do with the Winograd schema? That's a lot harder to fake: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Winograd_schema_challenge