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Top 10 Amazing (Somewhat Terrifying) Facts about AI
10. Most AI is “Female”
One thing
that you may have noticed when it comes to AI that you possibly interact with, like Google Now, Siri, and Cortana, that the
default voice is female. For the record, this isn’t one of the terrifying facts; we just
find it fascinating that AI tends to be female. Why is that, exactly?
Well, there’s no specific reason but a few factors play into it. For example, studies
have shown that males and females both like the sound of female voices a bit better. Another
reason, according to Karl Fredric MacDorman, a computer scientist and expert in human-computer
interaction at Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis, is that mostly men work on AI
so they probably find females attractive and want their AI to follow suit. Kathleen Richardson,
a social anthropologist, said that female AI would be less threatening than male AI.
For example, compare Samantha in Her to the Terminator machines. Well, except for Terminator
3, but then again, who the hell actually remembers that movie?
9. Artificial Intelligence Pets
Pets are great, but they have a number of downsides. You have to clean up after them,
they can be destructive, they need to be fed, and of course, they die. Something that will
take care of all those downsides is AI driven pets. University of Melbourne animal welfare
researcher Dr. Jean-Loup Rault says that there are already a number of patents for robot
pets and they could be widely available by 2025.
Rault says that in the next 10-15 years, developers will work on a number of aspects of AI and
robotics so that manufacturers will be able to build pet-bots that people will be able
to make an emotional connection with. Rault believes that robotic pets will be one of
the only viable options for most people as the world gets more populated. He theorized
that by 2050, only the incredibly wealthy will be able to afford real live pets.
8. Artificial Intelligence Can Repair Itself
On the terrifying end of the spectrum, there was a paper published this year about a robot
that could rebuild itself, even after losing two of its six legs. The robot doesn’t know
what’s broken, but notices that its performance has dropped. Then, using an algorithm based
on trial and error, the robot can figure out what’s wrong and how to repair itself. The
researchers who developed the robot said that as it fixes itself, it updates its database
with all the things that will not work in a phase called “simulated childhood.”
This phase lasts for a few minutes and during that time, the robot processes 13,000 possible
movements. Those movements are pulled from 10^47 different behaviors, which is an unfathomable
number. For a comparison, that’s how many atoms make up the Earth. The implications
of this type of artificial intelligence are essentially limitless. Some of the more exciting
prospects include search and rescue and deep sea and space exploration.
7. Artificial Intelligence Can Write
The first piece for a major news organization that was written by AI appeared on the Los
Angeles Times website after a newspaper article reading:
“A shallow magnitude 4.7 earthquake was reported Monday morning five miles [8km] from
Westwood, California, according to the US Geological Survey. The temblor occurred at
6.25am Pacific time at a depth of 5.0 miles. According to the USGS, the epicenter was six
miles from Beverly Hills, California, seven miles from Universal City, California, seven
miles from Santa Monica, California, and 348 miles from Sacramento, California. In the
past 10 days, there have been no earthquakes magnitude 3.0 and greater centered nearby.
This information comes from the USGS Earthquake Notification Service and this post was created
by an algorithm written by the author.”
The computer was able to write the article based on data that was pulled from seismographs,
which turned them into figures and then plugged those figures into a story. The technology
was developed in part by Larry Birnbaum, a professor of journalism and the head of the
Intelligent Information Laboratory at Northwestern University. He was one of the developers of
the Quill system, which is an app for companies that do minimal writing. It takes statistics
and graphs and compiles them into written reports. As for creative writing, like novels
and screenplays, that is the next step for AI, but it’s obviously complicated. Perhaps
AI will start off at a Nicholas Sparks’ level and then work itself up from there.
6. Artificial Intelligence can be a Fierce Poker Player
A big step in the evolution of AI was when IBM’s chess-playing Deep Blue computer beat
reigning world champion Garry Kasparov in 1997. Another milestone was in 2011 when IBM’s
Watson appeared on Jeopardy and completely destroyed some of the best Jeopardy contestants
ever. AI took another major step in May 2015, when a supercomputer called Claudico from
Carnegie Mellon University competed in a game of Heads-Up No-Limit Texas Hold ’em poker
at the Rivers Casino in Pittsburgh. The tournament lasted two weeks and 80,000 hands were played.
In the end, Claudico came in fourth, and the “loss” was close enough to be considered
scientifically valid, meaning that statistically, Claudico tied his human competitors. While
it didn’t win, it was a big step in AI computing. The big difference between a game like poker
and playing chess or Jeopardy is that poker has a lot of missing information, and bluffing
is a major strategy and not a logical way of thinking.
Researchers said that the tournament was a great start and they believe that by 2020,
AI will be able to beat the best poker players in the world. This type of AI also has a number
of other applications instead of just trying to clean out casinos. The algorithms used
in Claudico will be applicable anywhere there is incomplete information, including cyber
security, medicine and negotiations.
5. Romantic Relationships with Artificial Intelligence
HER
A question that’s bound to arise is that if AI is almost or completely indistinguishable
from humans, will humans be able to have physical and emotional relationships with AI entities?
David Levy at the University of Maastricht in the Netherlands had an interesting, but
plausible, scenario where sex with a robot could become more mainstream. He said that
at first it will come across as geeky, but then a story will appear in a publication
like Cosmo in which someone will rave about how great sex with a robot is, and the mainstream
attention could alter the prevailing attitudes.
But how close are we to something like that? Well, both Levy and Henrik Christensen, founder
of the European Robotics Research Network, thought that by 2012, humans would be having
sex with robots. We’re actually closer than you think, as there are currently a number
of sex toys that use robotics and promise pleasure like you’ve never experienced before.
As for serious relationships, like marriage, AI and Androids still need quite a few years
of advancement. With that being said, Levy believes that by 2050, human and robot marriages
will be made legal. Of course it could just be that Levy is way too big a fan of the movie
Her.
4. Artificial Intelligence Can Learn
There’s a saying about computers that they’re only as smart as the person using them. However,
with advancements with AI, computers are starting to learn by themselves. For example, Google
developed an AI system that taught itself to play Atari 2600 games. After doing so,
it beat some of the world’s best players.
Another learning AI system is an android developed by the United States Army that learned how
to cook from watching YouTube videos. The robot was able to learn the skills from visual
recognition and trial and error. While it’s unlikely that the military will use robot
chefs, cooking uses a wide arrange of skills so it is an excellent demonstration of what
the robot is capable of.
3. AI Will Become Smarter Than Humans
With AI having the ability to learn, computers are getting to be pretty smart. As of 2013,
AI was about at the same intelligence level as a four-year-old and there have been lots
of advances since then. For example, in 2014 a supercomputer cracked a complicated math
problem called Erdos discrepancy problem, which was published in 1930. The amazing thing
is that humans can’t even double check the solution because the equation is too long.
The file is 13-gigabytes, and just for comparison, all of Wikipedia is about 10-gigbytes.
According to renowned futurist Ray Kurzweil, by 2029 AI will be at about the level of intelligent
adult humans. Beyond that, anything is pretty much possible, especially if AI can get exponentially
smarter. For example, Kurzweil believes it could lead to something called singularity,
which is where humans and machines will meld into one entity.
2. Nautilus
An interesting development in artificial intelligence is an SGI Altix supercomputer called Nautilus.
It appears that, to a certain degree, Nautlius can predict the future. For example, it was
able to predict where Osama bin Laden was hiding within 125 miles, and was also able
to predict the Arab Spring that started in December of 2010.
Nautilus gathered this information from over 100 million news articles from all over the
world dating back to 1945. The articles would be analyzed for two different criteria: the
mood of the article, and the location of the story. This information led to a web of 100
trillion relationships and the data was fed into Nautilus. From that information, the
computer was able to piece the information together and create graphs that charted mood.
For example, with the Arab Spring, sentiment in the area was low before the protests.
The author of the findings, Kalev Leetaru from the University of Illinois’ Institute
for Computing in the Humanities, Arts and Social Science, is looking at making the information
work in real time. While Nautilus won’t exactly predict the future, it may give mood
forecasts similar to economic forecasts or weather reports.
1. The AI Apocalypse
There’s little doubt that AI has the potential to greatly improve our lives. AI will make
the roads safer, help in medicine, aide the disabled and the elderly, work customer service
and a number of countless other jobs. However, AI also poses an incredible threat, and this
isn’t the stuff of science fiction, either. Top scientists and technologists like Stephen
Hawking, Bill Gates and Elon Musk believe that AI is a very real, and dangerous threat
to humankind.
It’s so dangerous that Max Tegmark, a physicist at MIT, compared it to the development of
nuclear weapons and says we may only be able to do it right the first time. In fact, there
has been a push to actually slow down advancement on AI and focus more on containment. Containment
is important because if we were to ever lose control of AI, we may never get it back. Then
it’s just a matter of time, since the AI could wipe out humanity because it could calculate
that humans are a virus-like being, or it could kill humans as a way of self-preservation.
Essentially, AI will either fix all of our problems or destroy us all. In other words,
The Terminator and The Matrix aren’t nearly as farfetched as we previously believed.