If A.I. Systems Become Conscious, Should They Have Rights?

ask elon. he's a moron on ai.
Elon has done pretty good with it.

Tesla cars have level 3 driver assist systems. That means they can self-navigate (at least through normal circumstances, and I don't trust ANY car to self navigate for all cases it encounters!).

His robots are very good at self navigating as well, and they are pretty easy to program for new tasks. They are also quite flexible and strong for a robot. Once they are sold publicly, I expect to see all kinds of new capabilities in them, just like what happened to the Alexa service for Besos.

Sure, the Cybertruck looks like it came out of a 1980's video game. They are sure popular around greater Seattle though. Mostly for it's unusual look, I think. They have very limited utility. But...they ARE reasonably popular near cities, despite their high price and limited capability. It still has level 3 driver assist though!
 
How would anyone know?

Ask yourself: how do you KNOW that the people you talk to on any given day are "conscious" like you are.

Sure you can "ask", but that will just get you the info the other person is WILLING to give you. You can't really know.


With AI I think it is much more subtle. I have no clue whether (or even really WHAT) consciousness is or can arise within AI but I am willing to say that at some point it will be impossible to tell for certain. AI is too much like how humans learn.

I also have unpopular opinions on AI and artists intellectual property but that's for another time.
So you fail the Turing test...but AI can pass it. Does that make you dumber than a computer?
 
The chants vary slightly, but it's the same fear and bullshit. It's by people that do not understand what a computer is. Quite a lot of them are programmers too!

A computer is nothing more than a general purpose sequencing device with a pocket calculator attached to it; and it has the ability to remember the sequence.

It certainly isn't 'smart'. It has no conscience. It has no intelligence. A.I. is a phrase used to describe a computer program using a feedback loop (normally itself mostly automated using data in the cloud itself). The Cloud is just a bunch of servers providing services that used to be on site, but are now available over the internet. Things like virtual disks, virtual machines, and routing information.

The Alexa service itself uses a semi-automated learning loop, but it's a poor one. Everything Alexa recognizes was programmed by someone writing a skill for it, or by Amazon programming a general starting dictionary itself. This starting dictionary can be refined by feedback from customers using the service when Alexa fails to recognize the command they gave. In this way, it can better handle the many accents across the country it has to deal with.

Yet Alexa is considered 'smart'. It only knows what people programmed into it, most of it through skill dictionaries written by literally thousands of people writing skills.

...and all AI is basically the same kind of thing...from driver assist systems (even level 3 systems, which are self driving!), robot navigation systems, chatbots, etc. They are all the same inside.

On the surface, it appears 'smart', but it's really very dumb. It only knows what people told it. It looks 'smart' because thousands of people are telling it what to do for each and every individual case they are interested in.

Elon has done pretty good with it.

Tesla cars have level 3 driver assist systems. That means they can self-navigate (at least through normal circumstances, and I don't trust ANY car to self navigate for all cases it encounters!).

His robots are very good at self navigating as well, and they are pretty easy to program for new tasks. They are also quite flexible and strong for a robot. Once they are sold publicly, I expect to see all kinds of new capabilities in them, just like what happened to the Alexa service for Besos.

Sure, the Cybertruck looks like it came out of a 1980's video game. They are sure popular around greater Seattle though. Mostly for it's unusual look, I think. They have very limited utility. But...they ARE reasonably popular near cities, despite their high price and limited capability. It still has level 3 driver assist though!
he's an idiot for prompting the destruction of humanity with all this ai bullshit.
 
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