This, I think, is a Pretty Big Deal. Should we be worried? I'm not, at least not terribly. What would scare me? The AI that deliberately fails the Turing Test.

Quote
...Passing the Turing Test is a significant milestone, as it demonstrates the ability of an AI model to convincingly mimic human-like conversation, making it difficult for users to differentiate between AI-generated and human-generated responses....

A Turing test is an examination that takes place in the AI industry to review the credentials of an AI chatbot. Through this test, the experts analyze whether the AI chatbot is capable of interacting, responding, and making them believe it is indeed a human. The Turing test was initiated by British mathematician and computer scientist Alan Turing around seven decades ago.

This test usually takes place with a human assessor with the AI and humans in general conversation. Based on the answers delivered the accessor determines whether it was a human or an AI.

If the judge is unable to distinguish between both responses, then the machine passes the test. Passing the Turing test is a huge milestone for any AI chatbot, as this determines the capabilities of the chatbot to truly interact like a human....


Read the whole thing at the link.

Onward and upward,
airforce