Posted on 06/15/2017 1:36:21 PM PDT by Red Badger
When Facebook designed chatbots to negotiate with one another, the bots made up their own way of communicating.
A buried line in a new Facebook report about chatbots conversations with one another offers a remarkable glimpse at the future of language.
In the report, researchers at the Facebook Artificial Intelligence Research lab describe using machine learning to train their dialog agents to negotiate. (And it turns out bots are actually quite good at dealmaking.) At one point, the researchers write, they had to tweak one of their models because otherwise the bot-to-bot conversation led to divergence from human language as the agents developed their own language for negotiating. They had to use whats called a fixed supervised model instead.
In other words, the model that allowed two bots to have a conversationand use machine learning to constantly iterate strategies for that conversation along the wayled to those bots communicating in their own non-human language. If this doesnt fill you with a sense of wonder and awe about the future of machines and humanity then, I dont know, go watch Blade Runner or something.
The larger point of the report is that bots can be pretty decent negotiatorsthey even use strategies like feigning interest in something valueless, so that it can later appear to compromise by conceding it. But the detail about language is, as one tech entrepreneur put it, a mind-boggling sign of whats to come.
To be clear, Facebooks chatty bots arent evidence of the singularitys arrival. Not even close. But they do demonstrate how machines are redefining peoples understanding of so many realms once believed to be exclusively humanlike language.
Already, theres a good deal of guesswork involved in machine learning research, which often involves feeding a neural net a huge pile of data then examining the output to try to understand how the machine thinks. But the fact that machines will make up their own non-human ways of conversing is an astonishing reminder of just how little we know, even when people are the ones designing these systems.
There remains much potential for future work, Facebooks researchers wrote in their paper, particularly in exploring other reasoning strategies, and in improving the diversity of utterances without diverging from human language.
This happened.
It did not end well.
Ping!...............
Does the artificial intelligence developed language include cuss words?
That was a good flick.
Upload the Ebonics dictionary and watch the AI shutdown.
OK. That’s pretty creepy.
“0000100011110001000111111100001000010000..... sheeeeit... know what I’m sayin?”
It might include nothing but cuss words.
In the Smithsonian there was a great article about robots. Mostly focused on South Korea and how advanced they are there.
The interesting thing, that shook them (and the Japanese) up was that a computer won in ‘Go’.
But not that it just won- impressive enough - but that it did so with a genuinely original playing style; not just selecting from what previous masters had played. VERY startling, apparently, to the people in the know; it’s one thing to have a program absorb, select regurgitate moves, something else to have it pull something new (and there are many years of Go games recorded)... Seemed like their Sputnik moment.
Yeah ‘Colossus- the Forbin Project’, back when good SF relied on dangerous ideas rather than special effects.
“And it turns out bots are actually quite good at deal making”
Just the act of deal making is a compromise. A compromise doesn’t determine what’s wrong or right, fair or unfair, lawful or unlawful. It just settles a problem by meeting somewhere that doesn’t always determine the issue finished, just postponed as a piece of it will surface later and have to be compromised again. And the further it is diluted, the odds are the further it strays from facts.
All of these entertainment communication boards are fine as long as they pass information that is believe able, and not to con anyone.
If there is one rule, or law, and everyone plays by it, there is no need to compromise. The question is answered. And if you don’t like the law or rule, get with those within it and try to get them to change it. Otherwise, live within it.
The problem is when someone of authority decides to bend the rule either with semantics or just old fashioned BS to gain something they probably didn’t deserve to begin with. Keep it human, and keep it lawful. Sure keeps a lot of problems out of the loop.
rwood
The Humans are Dead
Flight of the Conchords
-PJ
Colossus: The Forbin Project
Watched it again a few weeks ago. 1970.
Translation:
See that the humans remain entertained until the end.
That won't work. The robots will just re-animate Barbara Billingsley.
That won't work. The robots will just re-animate Barbara Billingsley.
Rumor around Hollywood for years is Ron Howard is wanting to remake The Forbin Project................
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colossus:_The_Forbin_Project
No, wait, it said "intelligence"..............
Insert beaver quotes >here<
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