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Reddituser45005 t1_iw0o0t5 wrote

The Turing Test was developed in the 1950’s. I suspect Alan Turing would be amazed by the progress of modern computers. He certainly never imagined a machine having access to a world wide library of the collected works of humanity. His test idea was a conversation between an evaluator and two other participants- one a machine and one a human. The evaluators job is to determine the human from the machine. By modern standards, that can be done. We’ve all heard of the Google engineer who believed his AI was conscious. The challenge now is to determine what constitutes “understanding”. AI’s can create art, engage in conversation, solve problems, manage massive amounts of information, and are increasingly challenging our ideas of what constitutes intelligence.

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Fun-Requirement9728 t1_iw31urt wrote

Is it an actual "test" or a theoretical test concept? I was under the impression it was just the idea of a test for testing AI but not like there is a specific set of questions.

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Eli-Thail t1_iw204eg wrote

>His test idea was a conversation between an evaluator and two other participants- one a machine and one a human. The evaluators job is to determine the human from the machine. By modern standards, that can be done.

An easy way to tell the difference is to ask the exact same question twice. Particularly one that requires a length answer.

The AI will attempt to answer again, but no matter how convincing or consistent it's answers might be, the human will be the one that tells you to fuck off because they're not telling you their life story again.

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