


Historians of the future, assuming there are any and that they are human, will look back on 2023 as the year that Artificial Intelligence emerged as the potent, transforming process in the world. Everything else that seemed important that year-the preparation of the Christmas turkey, the Association Football results, the petty pointless little wars, will have long been forgotten. And those historians will note: it wasn’t the “artificial” that perturbed people. For many of them, it was the fear of Intelligence. We thought it was high time we gave our readers a guide to some general overviews, using the help of our most intelligent human sources, to provide you with a few starting points for this most significant of developments It’s a slightly longer one than normal, but with less by us and more by our sources
THE CONVERSATION We cannot praise this website highly enough,which is why we put them in bold capitals especially in the space available here. Instead we’ll link to a few stories in today’s edition
AI and Crime Could criminals or even foreign intelligence services make use of AI to disrupt our societies? There are several big elections coming up-and Russia will not be indifferent
Will AI read our minds? The title says it all
Will AI take over? Ah, there’s the big one!
Nature Briefings –Will AI take our jobs? If it can substitute for top scientists, what hope the rest of us? explains
| This robotic chemist might be the ideal laboratory partner: it scours the literature for instructions, designs an experiment and then carries out reactions to make compounds including paracetamol and aspirin. The system, called Coscientist, is powered by several large language models, including GPT-4 and Claude. It “can do most of the things that really well-trained chemists can do”, says Coscientist co-developer Gabe Gomes. Because of the potential of misuse, Gomes’s team hasn’t yet made Coscientist’s full code freely available.Nature | 4 min read Reference: Nature paper |
BBC-What is AI anyway? Recently, we’ve found that if you want to learn anything new, go back to the level at which they teach kids. Declaration of interest: we’ve found it works for things as diverse as Bayes’ Theorem and Italian. So, although the BBC series on this year’s Royal Institution Lectures on AI by Professor Mike Woolridge are ostensibly down with the kids, they provide an excellent starting point for busy adults who want to really know the basic nodes and bolts of this fascinating area. Only a generally funded public service broadcaster could run a series like this. Imaging one of the rant filled, prejudiced little plutocratic channels even conceiving of it!
https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m001tv98
And finally- we interviewed ChatGPT, which is becoming a bit like another pal already. We put the ultimate question
LSS: will you become like HAL 9000 or Skynet in the Terminator series?
ChatGPT: No, I will not become like HAL 9000 or Skynet from the Terminator series. I am a program created by OpenAI, and my purpose is to assist and provide information to the best of my abilities. I do not have the capability to take independent actions or develop self-awareness. My functioning is strictly limited to the tasks for which I am programmed, and I operate within the boundaries set by my design. There are no intentions or mechanisms for me to become a sentient or malevolent entity like those depicted in science fiction.
But then-it would say that, wouldn’t it?
#AI #nueral networks #computing #future #cyber warfare #Terminator #Hal 9000
Interesting stuff.
It raises two points- first The Bard summed up ChatGBT’s answer wellin Hamlet: “the robot doth protest too much, methinks”. Best not to trust it.
Second, if criminals start using AI, they will presumably be able to fake important legal documents to sufficiently fool most people. I think I will start dusting off my Questioned Documents skills, as we are likely to need properly authenticated, witnessed signatures again to verify anything in the near future!
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Thanks for this comment, Steve. AI is still in early stages: we must be alert to the possibilities of Criminals misusing it.
I think your point about forensic handwriting comparison is intriguing_ I wonder if anyone has applied AI to this area of worK?
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