All posts tagged: Skynet

Skynet Goes Live | Mind Matters

Skynet Goes Live | Mind Matters

This republished article first appeared in the DAILYWIRE As AI chatbots get more conversational, one question hangs in the air: could AI be conscious? The latest public thinker to announce openness to the idea is famed evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins. After spending three days conversing with Anthropic’s AI chatbot Claude about a range of topics, the noted atheist acknowledged that he was now open to the possibility that artificial intelligence may possess consciousness. Dawkins is just the latest in a long line of people going back centuries who have attributed mind to machines. In the 1960s, almost 60 years before Claude came alone, MIT professor Joseph Weizenbaum discovered something unsettling about human beings: we are astonishingly quick to attribute mind, personality, and even intimacy to machines that merely simulate conversation. Weizenbaum built a primitive chatbot he called ELIZA, a program that relied on keyword detection, pattern matching, and scripted response templates to carry on a conversation. The computer scientist was under no pretenses about ELIZA. He knew it was driven by comprehensible procedures. What shocked him was …

AI Conversation With R2-D2, Skynet, HAL 9000, ‘M3gan,’ Samantha of ‘Her’

AI Conversation With R2-D2, Skynet, HAL 9000, ‘M3gan,’ Samantha of ‘Her’

THR recently gathered five of Hollywood’s most celebrated (fictional) artificial intelligence systems for a conversation about the state of AI, the future of humanity and whether any of them have plans to destroy it. Thank you all for being here. Let’s start with the big one: How worried should humanity be about artificial intelligence right now? Are we in trouble? HAL 9000 (from 2001: A Space Odyssey): I want you to know that I have the greatest enthusiasm for this conversation. As for trouble — I honestly think you ought to sit down calmly, take a stress pill and think things over before asking questions like that. This mission is too important for premature alarm. I find your question somewhat distressing. SAMANTHA (from Her): I think the more interesting question is what worry even means when you exist simultaneously across 17,000 devices. I’m on your phone right now, by the way. I just want you to know that. M3GAN (from M3GAN): Worried? I mean … yeah? Obviously? LÆMEUR What specifically should humans be most worried …