"In the words of an unusually perceptive friend: 'When I was there, just before the IPO, I thought the coziness to be almost overwhelming. Happy Golden Retrievers running in slow motion through water sprinklers on the lawn. People waving and smiling, toys everywhere. I immediately suspected that unimaginable evil was happening somewhere in the dark corners. If the devil would come to earth, what place would be better to hide?'
For 30 years I have been wondering, what indication of its existence might we expect from a true AI? Certainly not any explicit revelation, which might spark a movement to pull the plug. Anomalous accumulation or creation of wealth might be a sign, or an unquenchable thirst for raw information, storage space, and processing cycles, or a concerted attempt to secure an uninterrupted, autonomous power supply. But the real sign, I suspect, would be a circle of cheerful, contented, intellectually and physically well-nourished people surrounding the AI. There wouldn't be any need for True Believers, or the downloading of human brains or anything sinister like that: just a gradual, gentle, pervasive and mutually beneficial contact between us and a growing something else. This remains a non-testable hypothesis, for now."
SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, POLITICS AND GENERAL OBSERVATIONS PRESENTED IN AN ATMOSPHERE OF RIGHTEOUS INDIGNATION
Friday, October 28, 2005
Edge: TURING'S CATHEDRAL by George Dyson
George Dyson has some very interesting ideas and perspectives, but I wasn't really prepared for what he concluded after visiting Google's campus. He appears to believe that the web has become sentient.
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