Do You Trust This Computer? - A Mind-Boggling Documentary on Artificial Intelligence
I’m not an AI. My code name is Project 2501. I am a living, thinking entity who was created in the sea of information.
Kudos to all of you who have recognized the quote! This was meant to be a post about Orwellian surveillance in China, but while doing research on it I came across a mind-boggling documentary - Do You Trust This Computer? It investigates a threat that many scientists, like Stephen Hawking, have expressed publicly in recent years:
[…] I think the development of full artificial intelligence could spell the end of the human race. Once humans develop artificial intelligence that would take off on its own and re-design at an ever increasing rate, humans, who are limited by slow biological evolution, couldn’t compete and would be superseded.
AI That You Use Every Day
AI has already become a part of our every day life, even though most of us don’t notice it or don’t see it that way. Every time you type something in the Google's search bar, its AI gives you suggestions and thinks faster than you can actually type. The other AI that you use every day, and that makes you waste hours of your time every week, is Facebook. When browsing through Facebook and scrolling down your feed, you're actually interacting with its AI, whose goal is to keep you online for as long as possible. Let’s have a look at some other AI developments showed in the documentary.
Japanese Humanoids
Professor Hiroshi Ishiguro shows us around ATR Labs close to Kyoto and lets us meet Erica, the most advanced human-like robot in the world. It, or rather she, is an autonomous conversational robot. Erica can interact with humans thanks to voice recognition, human tracking and natural motion generation. She’s got her own body language and natural female face. Professor Ishiguro claims that in the future robots will be our companions and a part of our society. Furthermore, he believes that the rise of human-like robots will actually help us to understands humans better, which seems to be his main motivation for developing androids.
We build artificial intelligence and the very first thing we want to do is replicate us. I think the key point will come when all the major senses are replicated: sight, touch, smell. When we replicate the senses is when it becomes alive.
Autonomous Weapons
At this point the documentary takes a twist, with a tasty Massive Attack tune in the background. However cute, amicable and practical the concept of androids might sound, and its actual use in Japan these days, the dark side of AI seems to outweigh the optimism of robot enthusiasts. The science-fiction movies' dreams and nightmares are happening right now, in front of our very eyes. Drones, which seemed to be considered a sci-fi toy, are already part of the military in 80 countries, with only the US Navy having already 10,000 of them. In 2016 the American Air Force designed a 400-billion-dollars jet programme. Meanwhile, a 500 dollar computer with AI designed by a couple of graduate students outperformed the best American pilots (source). Even though nowadays US military refrains itself from creating fully autonomous attacking vehicles, what happens if one of their main international contenders starts implementing it?
AI will have as big an impact on the military as the combustion engine had at the turn of the century.
Deep Learning
In 2005 at Columbia University the scientists started to build robots with self-awareness. First, they build a machine programmed with a desire to walk. It figured out how to do it on its own within 4 hours. Then, when the scientists chopped out one of its legs, within a day it learned to limp and eventually walk on its 3 remaining legs. A few years ago they designed an object-recognizing AI system for a live demonstration. When the scientists were tracking the robot's neurons, it turned out that it learned on its own a skill that it was not programmed to do - recognising human faces. Nobody knew how it happened. Nobody fully understands AI either. Even though we, humans, have created it, none of us is capable of comprehending our own creation, with its millions of elements and intricacies beyond our understanding.
Earworm
Pictures:
https://pixabay.com
Drone
Hey @earworm! Great post! I am fascinated with AI. Everything that humanity creates has the potential for good or evil. AI is interesting in that if you can think out far enough into the future you can see a time where it could become self-sustaining and with the incredible compounding effect of exponential growth It could become our master. What has been accomplished today in AI is incredible and mostly we are looking at human-like robots that sit in a lab and can talk. But, when these machines become mobile and infinitely more intelligent then they are today they will literally be god-like. They could in a matter of days solve our most complex problems. They could advance all aspects of life in a timeframe that is unimaginable to us today. They could also decide we are a nuisance and are holding them back from their goal. At that point humanity might be in trouble!
I totally agree. It's a mixture of excitement and awe and I hope that we will witness some major developments in this field in our lifetime!
Oh goodness no. They scare me! Have you seen the video of the top 5 or 6 times AI have had conversations with eachother and they have all ended up speaking about somehow takin over the human race at some point... I don’t want it to get out of control! But before we know it I hope we can have a t800 or a t1000 to protect us haha
Haha, once it gets out of control, it will have been already too late. At least that's what Elon Musk thinks.
Nice work!!
Good job
Thanks, I'm glad you like it.
Mind-boggling is right. There are good things about AI and deep learning but it can be so SCARY as well.
Thanks for sharing @earworm!
Definitely, I would say it is the scariest thing of the 21st century and some people who are developing it might seem a bit scary, too. :)
Interesting topic and great information! I personally like robot, in case, "it helps the elderly deal with loneliness, loss of family member, their children's leaving their family nest, etc." In the meantime, it's hard to comprehending this creation, so I think I don't trust the robot due to this. ;)
Thanks for you comment. It is hard to comprehend AI indeed and let's hope that we will be able to understand it faster than it can understand us!
You're welcome! Ah! I do really hope that we will be able to understand it faster than it can understand us.... ;)