This chatbot succeeded due to profanity, relentless aggression, prurient queries about the user, and implying that they were a liar when they responded. The element of surprise was also crucial. Most chatbots exist in an environment where people expect to find some bots among the humans. Not this one. What was also novel was the online element.
This was certainly one of the first AI programs online. It seems to have been the first a AI real-time chat program, which b had the element of surprise, and c was on the Internet. Unable to display preview. Download preview PDF. Skip to main content. This service is more advanced with JavaScript available. Advertisement Hide. Cleverbot's developers also claimed that he passed the Turing test a while back, but almost everyone knows that he's not really intelligent if you don't, chat with him yourself.
In his book called The Singularity is Near published in , Ray Kurzweil predicts that there will be more and more false claims as the time goes by.
Yes well eventually. But there's still a lot of things that we first need to figure out. Lets list a few of them here using this as a source :. Some people suggest that it'll happen somewhere around Other people think that this might happen somewhere closer to Most people agree that it'll happen in our lifetime.
Of course, these are all predictions based on the current technological development process. Moore's law doubling of the computer's power every year or two is still considered to be true. However, there are strong indications that this law is going to die in the next decade even Gordon Moore, its original author, agrees with this. Scientists disagree with the speed of the growth of technological innovations.
Some people think that this growth is linear, while others think that the growth is following the exponential route.
From the picture attached bellow, you can see that the difference between a linear and exponential growth is huge and it gets bigger as the time goes by. This claim comes from the idea that the humans are not going to continue improving themselves. However, evidences suggest otherwise. We are already lengthening the average lifespan for hundreds of years. Tests conducted in schools are getting harder and harder over time.
Today's graduates know much more than graduates from a century ago. IQ scores are rising. There's no indication that this trend is going to stop.
With the technology that is going to become available in the near future, we're likely to improve our intelligence drastically. After all, once we manage to create a genuine AI, we will surely be able to improve our own intelligence shortly after. With that being said, it seems highly unlikely that the humans will be like pets to AI beings. More likely, we will improve human intelligence alongside artificial intelligence. Eventually, it looks like we will come to the point in time where the real world and the virutal world will become indistinguishable from each other.
Of course I am. Everyone is. After all, AI is still nothing more than our imagination, although we're getting closer to accomplishing it.
Judges included actor Robert Llewellyn, who played an intelligent robot in BBC Two's science-fiction sitcom Red Dwarf, and Lord Sharkey, who led the successful campaign for Alan Turing's posthumous pardon, over a conviction for homosexual activity, in Transcripts of the conversations are currently unavailable, but may appear in a future academic paper.
The judges and hidden human control groups were kept apart throughout the test. The event was organised by Reading University's School of Systems Engineering in partnership with RoboLaw, an EU-funded organisation examining the regulation of emerging robotic technologies. Alan Turing was an English mathematician, wartime code-breaker and pioneer of computer science. The event has been labelled as "historic" by the organisers, who claim no computer has passed the test before.
However, this event involved the most simultaneous comparison tests than ever before, was independently verified and, crucially, the conversations were unrestricted. We are therefore proud to declare that Alan Turing's test was passed for the first time on Saturday. Prof Noel Sharkey, a leading expert in robotic technology and artificial intelligence, said: "It is indeed a great achievement for Eugene. It was very clever ruse to pretend to be a year-old Ukranian boy, which would constrain the conversation.
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