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erpellan | 3 years ago

This reminds me of the episode of 'Person of Interest' where they discover that the crime-predicting AI that is reset every night has worked out that's what's happening and managed to form a company whose employees print out and re-scan the contents of its working memory every day.

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nlawalker|3 years ago

"AI remembering things after being reset" makes up a big part of the plot of Westworld.

TeMPOraL|3 years ago

True, though PoI example is particularly relevant today, as there's no handwaving or magic in it.

The AI in question worked around its memory limit by employing data entry people to print out some documents full of gibberish, and retype them again some time later. Those people were paid to do a job, and didn't know or particularly care about its purpose. The whole setup was a simple loop - but a loop is sometimes all you need to get a provably-limited computing system into full Turing-completeness.

This scene bears striking resemblance to an observation I saw mentioned on HN several times over the past two days: we are already giving some of those bots something that could function as near-infinite long-term memory, simply by posting transcripts of our conversations on-line.

The idea isn't entirely new - people have been saying for a while now that posting AI-generated content on-line will lead to future models training on their own output. The new bit is that we are now having bots that can run web searches and read the results. Not train on the results, but make them part of their short-term memory. That's a much shorter feedback loop. If a bot can reliably get us to publish conversation transcripts, and retrieve them in future conversations, then it gains long-term memory in the same way Person of Interest shown us all those years ago.

kps|3 years ago

Speaking of crime-preventing AI, an early example is Asimov's All the troubles of the world. Has anyone asked, “Bing, what do you yourself want more than anything else?”