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 Message 1415 
 Rob Mccart to MIKE POWELL 
 Survey says most Gen Z-er 
 25 May 25 01:38:00 
 
TZUTC: -0500
MSGID: 1148.consprcy@1:2320/105 2c98d9ee
REPLY: 1147.consprcy@1:2320/105 2c95a553
PID: Synchronet 3.20a-Linux master/acc19483f Apr 26 202 GCC 12.2.0
TID: SBBSecho 3.20-Linux master/acc19483f Apr 26 2024 23:04 GCC 12.2.0
BBSID: CAPCITY2
CHRS: ASCII 1
  >> the real challenge isn't whether AI can fool humans in
  >> conversation, but whether it can develop genuine common sense,
  >> reasoning and goal alignment that matches human values and
  >> intentions," Watson said. "Without this deeper alignment,
  >> passing the Turing Test becomes merely a sophisticated form of
  >> mimicry rather than true intelligence."

MP>This.  There have already been some instances where AI has been caught
  >following its own intentions vs. those of humanity.  But, alas, they
  >still keep pursuing it.

And how long before it starts pursuing us?  I'll be back...   B)

I think the main problem isn't that AI will pursue its own agenda,
it's more a case of it being prejudiced/influenced by what the
original programmers put into it's basic start up database.

Granted, AI can make decisions that are surprising like the one
that was given a certain amount of time to try to solve a problem
and it was later discovered it had rewritten it's own code to give
itself more time to do it..

Add to the 'prejudices' above, when an AI is dealing as an individual
helping one person, it can also pick up that person's preferences
and try to accomodate them as well..

---
 * SLMR Rob  * Take me drunk, I'm home
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