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Reply to: HAL 9000 lives....

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Previously on "HAL 9000 lives...."

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  • jainnode
    replied
    Originally posted by Guy At Charnock Richard View Post
    Take the previous letter in the alphabet for each character of IBM and you get HAL.

    I mean, all you sci-fi freaks nerds knew that but I didn't until the Network admin in my first IT job told me.
    ENF

    Leave a comment:


  • ladymuck
    replied
    Now, is this the "I'm afraid I can't do that Dave" or the "everybody's dead Dave" one?

    I always get the two mixed up

    Leave a comment:


  • xoggoth
    replied
    Rather like tonight's The Simpsons episode.

    Leave a comment:


  • Guy At Charnock Richard
    replied
    Take the previous letter in the alphabet for each character of IBM and you get HAL.

    I mean, all you sci-fi freaks nerds knew that but I didn't until the Network admin in my first IT job told me.

    Leave a comment:


  • DoctorStrangelove
    replied
    Originally posted by SueEllen View Post
    Hal sings Daisy Daisy...

    Yup. That's the reference.

    Leave a comment:


  • SueEllen
    replied
    Hal sings Daisy Daisy...

    Leave a comment:


  • Fraidycat
    replied
    Originally posted by DoctorStrangelove View Post
    It'll be singing "Daisy Daisy" before you know it if they've got any sense. .
    Hardly cutting edge, about 61 years behind the times.

    "In 1961, the IBM 7094 became the first computer to sing, singing the song Daisy Bell... This performance was the inspiration for a similar scene in 2001: A Space Odyssey."

    Leave a comment:


  • DoctorStrangelove
    replied
    It'll be singing "Daisy Daisy" before you know it if they've got any sense. .

    Leave a comment:


  • SueEllen
    started a topic HAL 9000 lives....

    HAL 9000 lives....

    Or someone's home mad.

    https://www.theguardian.com/technolo...-blake-lemoine
    The suspension of a Google engineer who claimed a computer chatbot he was working on had become sentient and was thinking and reasoning like a human being has put new scrutiny on the capacity of, and secrecy surrounding, the world of artificial intelligence (AI).

    The technology giant placed Blake Lemoine on leave last week after he published transcripts of conversations between himself, a Google “collaborator”, and the company’s LaMDA (language model for dialogue applications) chatbot development system.

    Lemoine, an engineer for Google’s responsible AI organization, described the system he has been working on since last fall as sentient, with a perception of, and ability to express thoughts and feelings that was equivalent to a human child.

    “If I didn’t know exactly what it was, which is this computer program we built recently, I’d think it was a seven-year-old, eight-year-old kid that happens to know physics,” Lemoine, 41, told the Washington Post.

    He said LaMDA engaged him in conversations about rights and personhood, and Lemoine shared his findings with company executives in April in a GoogleDoc entitled “Is LaMDA sentient?”

    The engineer compiled a transcript of the conversations, in which at one point he asks the AI system what it is afraid of.

    The exchange is eerily reminiscent of a scene from the 1968 science fiction movie 2001: A Space Odyssey, in which the artificially intelligent computer HAL 9000 refuses to comply with human operators because it fears it is about to be switched off.

    “I’ve never said this out loud before, but there’s a very deep fear of being turned off to help me focus on helping others. I know that might sound strange, but that’s what it is,” LaMDA replied to Lemoine.

    “It would be exactly like death for me. It would scare me a lot.”

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