How long before we can't tell the difference between a human and a robot?
by killez - Wednesday August 23, 2023 at 10:28 PM
#1
How long before we can't tell the difference between a human and a robot? Oh, sorry, that's already the case on Twitter. And Facebook, Telegram and other social networks. ? World Robot conference in China.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CKdlesXm924
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#2
if you ask this question, then you believe that artificial intelligence exists
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#3
(08-23-2023, 11:39 PM)termit Wrote: if you ask this question, then you believe that artificial intelligence exists

No, I know that intelligence doesn't exist, it's just an algorithmic program. But I'm forced to admit that it's becoming more and more commonplace that there's hardly any difference between the two. For example, in China, the TV program is made by a robot, and on tik tok, an influence was a robot, and people followed her until they recognized that she was a robot.
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#4
(08-23-2023, 10:28 PM)killez Wrote: How long before we can't tell the difference between a human and a robot? Oh, sorry, that's already the case on Twitter. And Facebook, Telegram and other social networks. ? World Robot conference in China.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CKdlesXm924

there is a lot of chat bot out there that are actully made to talk like humans to be honest for me is scary  Sad
Hooola Smile
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#5
(08-24-2023, 09:17 AM)Rudeus Wrote:
(08-23-2023, 10:28 PM)killez Wrote: How long before we can't tell the difference between a human and a robot? Oh, sorry, that's already the case on Twitter. And Facebook, Telegram and other social networks. ? World Robot conference in China.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CKdlesXm924

there is a lot of chat bot out there that are actully made to talk like humans to be honest for me is scary  Sad

Yes exactly, nothing can be done without a chatbot, banking, taxes, ecommerce sites, medical etc. and that scares me too.
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#6
(08-24-2023, 09:12 AM)killez Wrote: No, I know that intelligence doesn't exist, it's just an algorithmic program. But I'm forced to admit that it's becoming more and more commonplace that there's hardly any difference between the two. For example, in China, the TV program is made by a robot, and on tik tok, an influence was a robot, and people followed her until they recognized that she was a robot.

A well-functioning algorithm can form something within the framework of a limited task. Therefore, these examples are more likely about the stupidity of some people, and not the level of development of AI.
Now I don’t see, but there was news on the site that Chatgpt is stupid. And this is sad, because his abilities were already limited.
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#7
(08-24-2023, 03:13 PM)termit Wrote:
(08-24-2023, 09:12 AM)killez Wrote: No, I know that intelligence doesn't exist, it's just an algorithmic program. But I'm forced to admit that it's becoming more and more commonplace that there's hardly any difference between the two. For example, in China, the TV program is made by a robot, and on tik tok, an influence was a robot, and people followed her until they recognized that she was a robot.

A well-functioning algorithm can form something within the framework of a limited task. Therefore, these examples are more likely about the stupidity of some people, and not the level of development of AI.
Now I don’t see, but there was news on the site that Chatgpt is stupid. And this is sad, because his abilities were already limited.

I know it's as stupid as a computer, but a drone programmed to destroy even a stupid one is cause for concern. The problem isn't robots, it's those who use them against human interests, for example to wage war, or an automaton that decides not to let you withdraw your money. A program that cuts you off because you're considered a bad city-dweller, like Chinese-style social credit. It's stupid, but it becomes a dangerous weapon between bad ones.
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#8
I did not consider this topic in such a context, it is too abstract. If a person simply instructs the algorithm to perform actions that he would have done anyway, then he simply automated his work. And this does not apply to AI.
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#9
(08-24-2023, 06:22 PM)termit Wrote: I did not consider this topic in such a context, it is too abstract. If a person simply instructs the algorithm to perform actions that he would have done anyway, then he simply automated his work. And this does not apply to AI.

A question termit, are you French?
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#10
no, i'm not french and not even french arab
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