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9 votes
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How to speak honeybee
7 votes -
AI’s new frontier: Connecting grieving loved ones with the deceased
7 votes -
Ubisoft and Riot Games announce the “Zero Harm in Comms” research project to detect harmful content in game chats
4 votes -
Adversarial policies beat professional-level Go AIs
12 votes -
What's so wrong about sexbots?
11 votes -
Shutterstock will start selling AI-generated stock imagery with help from OpenAI
9 votes -
Counterarguments to the basic AI risk case
5 votes -
National Gallery of the Faroe Islands becomes the first national gallery to feature a fully produced show created by artificial intelligence
5 votes -
Stable Dreamfusion: An open source implementation of Google's text-to-3D synthesis
9 votes -
The amazing power of "machine eyes"
6 votes -
I built an artificial intelligence that not only calls scammers to waste their time, but can steal their account information to help get them shut down (and it's working)
8 votes -
AI won't take coders' jobs. Humans still rule for now.
4 votes -
An AI program voiced Darth Vader in ‘Obi-Wan Kenobi’ so James Earl Jones could finally retire
8 votes -
Last year I secretly ghost-wrote and published my best friend's autobiography as a joke. This year I recorded the audiobook version using a deepfake of his voice, and released it for charity.
9 votes -
An AI-generated artwork won first place at a state fair fine arts competition, and artists are pissed
26 votes -
One week of Stable Diffusion
4 votes -
Stable Diffusion public release - a fully open text-to-image generator
20 votes -
Spotify and EasyJet to use music preferences to suggest holiday destinations
5 votes -
New political party in Denmark, whose policies are derived entirely from artificial intelligence, hopes to stand in the country's next general election in June 2023
10 votes -
How Townscaper works: A story, four games in the making
8 votes -
Meta's chatbot says the company 'exploits people'
9 votes -
Free AI bot that provides the Excel formula for any problem
7 votes -
AI and ethical licensing
9 votes -
What should a layperson know about AI?
Asking for a friend. 😉 In all seriousness, the question was inspired by the news out of Google and specifically @Whom's comment here. What should non-technical laypeople know about AI? The info...
Asking for a friend. 😉
In all seriousness, the question was inspired by the news out of Google and specifically @Whom's comment here.
What should non-technical laypeople know about AI?
The info doesn't have to be limited to just this particular news item either. What information would you want included in an AI 101 rundown? What is it currently used for? What will it do in the future? What are its limitations? What are its potentials?
And, of course, how should people interpret stuff like today's big news item?
15 votes -
What are some good examples of retro sci-fi literature (retrofuturism)?
So I'm reading Asimov's short-story anthology The Complete Robot, which contains stories written between 1939 and 1977, and I'm fascinated by several instances in which Asimov tries to predict the...
So I'm reading Asimov's short-story anthology The Complete Robot, which contains stories written between 1939 and 1977, and I'm fascinated by several instances in which Asimov tries to predict the future of robotics.
When he gets it right is just as interesting as when he gets it wrong, as even when he's wrong, he's wrong in very interesting ways.
For example, it's very interesting how Asimov seems to think that everything must have a positronic brain (which often produces something either identical or very close consciousness), when in reality we now have numerous useful robots that have nothing of the sort.
So this made me thinking, I think I'd like to write a story that was just like that, an exploration of universal themes that is facilitated by simplified technology. A form of retrofuturism. And since I had the idea, obviously someone else had it before. I wanna read it! More recent stories, especially those with old-school robots and artificial intelligence. Any suggestions?
Also open to other medias, but books would be particularly helpful.
15 votes -
The Google engineer who thinks the company’s AI has come to life
17 votes -
Is LaMDA Sentient? - An Interview
5 votes -
Chasing the treasure fox
2 votes -
Accused of cheating by an algorithm, and a Professor she had never met. An unsettling glimpse at the digitization of education.
17 votes -
The Internet as a superorganism AI ... thoughts?
This thought just popped into my head, so it's still quite nebulous, but I want to float it out here, see what other's have to say about it, before I really dive into it. Superorganisms are things...
This thought just popped into my head, so it's still quite nebulous, but I want to float it out here, see what other's have to say about it, before I really dive into it.
Superorganisms are things like ant and termite colonies and beehives ... and, for the sci-fi minded, the Borg. The theory/idea is that the individual ants/termites/bees are not actually independent living beings (or at least, not exclusively), but closer to cells in a larger, distributed body, with a distributed intellect driving the colony to thrive and reproduce, which only happens when, eg, the beehive throws a swarm that eventually becomes a new beehive.
The "Earth as Gaia" theory is comparable, suggesting that all of the life forms on Earth form an amorphous, distributed superintelligence that is trying to reproduce ... which would happen once humans colonize Mars, or meteor strikes on the Earth successfully transfer living organisms to another celestial body where life ultimately takes root.
So ... you see where I'm going with this? Is it a feasible idea to consider the Internet itself as a nascent AI superorganism, made up of both the humans (and, increasingly, the bots) that use it, as well as the assorted hardware and software that comprises it?
I'm confident I'm not the first person to entertain this idea, and I expect that, as soon as I start searching the 'Net for this topic, I'll find plenty on it. Just wanted to post the idea while it was still just my idea.
And of course, if I never post here again ... assume the Internet took me out.
9 votes -
What's next for AlphaFold and the AI protein-folding revolution
11 votes -
Solving the challenges of robotic pizza-making
6 votes -
How Native Americans are trying to debug AI’s biases
4 votes -
It looks like you’re trying to take over the world
14 votes -
MidJourney sharpens style of AI art
8 votes -
Dual use of artificial-intelligence-powered drug discovery
5 votes -
We're building computers wrong
5 votes -
The unnerving rise of video games that spy on you
14 votes -
An open source AI assistant + social network of decision makers to help people make better decisions
2 votes -
A new type of powerful artificial intelligence could make EU’s new law obsolete
5 votes -
These seed-firing drones can plant 40,000 trees every day
11 votes -
Sarco suicide capsule ‘passes legal review’ in Switzerland
18 votes -
Rise of the (fast food) robots: How labor shortages are accelerating automation
10 votes -
How the documentary "Welcome to Chechnya" used AI to hide the identity of witnesses
10 votes -
Facebook - An update on our use of face recognition
15 votes -
Maybe a killer AI isn't that bad
A few weeks ago I was having a conversation with friends about the singularity and transhumanism, and I thought it was very interesting to consider the philosophical value in preserving whatever...
A few weeks ago I was having a conversation with friends about the singularity and transhumanism, and I thought it was very interesting to consider the philosophical value in preserving whatever we consider to be humanity. That got me to thinking about non-anthropocentric views of the subject. I think that the one weakness to transhumanist ideas is that they put too much value on the perceived value of their humanity, regardless of what they define that term to mean. Does the existence of "humanity" make the universe any better in any measurable way?
Fast forward to now and I have come across a random group of people talking about Nier Automata. The game has a lot of thoughts about humanity and the value of life, and the fact that all the characters are robots and AI really help to give you a different perspective of everything. And during this time I'm thinking about people like Yudkowski and Musk who are terrified of AI becoming sentient and deciding that humans all deserve to die. And I think to myself, "wait a moment, is it really that bad?"
While of course I would hate to see humankind exterminated, there's actually merit to being succeeded by an intelligence of our own creation. For one thing, the combination of intelligence and sentience might in itself be considered to be a definition of humanity. And inasmuch it fulfills the desires that motivate transhumanism; the AI would last much longer than humanity could, could live in places that humans cant, and can live in ways that are much more sustainable than human bodies. This AI is also our successor; It would be the living legacy for us as a species. It would even have a better chance of coming into contact with intelligences other than our own.
Well, these are just thoughts that I thought were worth sharing.
14 votes -
There is no algorithm for truth (presentation by Tom Scott)
7 votes -
AI robots take off, with Boston Dynamics. Beyond Atlas' Parkour.
2 votes -
Elon Musk says Tesla is working on humanoid robots
11 votes