You lived most of your life without that and can again.My point of weakness is my ISP and it's box, they have access to my computer.
But the machines that could take over can't live without that technology, so that's where they fail.
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You lived most of your life without that and can again.My point of weakness is my ISP and it's box, they have access to my computer.
But isn't our civilization built on technology? We may have lived without it at one point but now? I don't think so... how many millions would starve for a start?You lived most of your life without that and can again.
But the machines that could take over can't live without that technology, so that's where they fail.
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Of course, but the outcome would be as I've said, humans surviving and flourishing again and the machines vanquished.But isn't our civilization built on technology? We may have lived without it at one point but now? I don't think so... how many millions would starve for a start?
Ah yes the results of monkeying about with time... I rather enjoyed 12 monkeys..The Trump administration has not extended the ban on research on deadly diseases so maybe the Twelve Monkeys will get us before the Terminator does...
I think the threat is more pernicious than automated weapon systerns. Today AI machines can learn playing games and in a few hours, play better than the best of humans, in a decade or two, machines can learn to understand any human languages, maybe even animals' languages, they can surpass our capability of remaining their masters. Amazon and Google have already provided cloud capabilities with near infinite elasticity, scaling up, horizontally and vertically. If you think that paper money is going to disappear, from electronic money to crypto money is only one step in the process. These currencies are extremely exposed to insider trading and artificial intelligence. An AI app loaded to the cloud(s) can create its viruses to survive any human attempts to control it. My son wrote an app that lives entirely on the web, capable of buying and selling.Not when it's playing chess!
Ultimately it's lack of flexible physical access that defeats the electronic brains in the foreseeable future. We are at least centuries away from the machines evolving the infinite flexibility of human action, and possibly millennia.
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I refer you back to this answerI think the threat is more pernicious than automated weapon systerns. Today AI machines can learn playing games and in a few hours, play better than the best of humans, in a decade or two, machines can learn to understand any human languages, maybe even animals' languages, they can surpass our capability of remaining their masters. Amazon and Google have already provided cloud capabilities with near infinite elasticity, scaling up, horizontally and vertically. If you think that paper money is going to disappear, from electronic money to crypto money is only one step in the process. These currencies are extremely exposed to insider trading and artificial intelligence. An AI app loaded to the cloud(s) can create its viruses to survive any human attempts to control it. My son wrote an app that lives entirely on the web, capable of buying and selling.
that outcome is not guaranteed.Of course, but the outcome would be as I've said, humans surviving and flourishing again and the machines vanquished.
Every human dies anyway and in the greater scheme of things it doesn't matter when that is. We have a huge overpopulation problem anyway, our 7 plus billions eating the world's resources many times faster than they are being naturally replaced. So a major reduction would greatly benefit us.
In the game of life it will always end Humans 1, Machines 0.
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It's amazing how technology can blind.that outcome is not guaranteed.
Humans have created the information technology that can escape the earth.
Look at any large installation.
More and more people are employed to do less and less.
AI's speed of progress is exponential. A thousand years from now, AI can potentially have wiped us out, either through reducing our bodily functions (eating, reproduction) or war or lack of jobs, making humans redundant.
the genie is out of the bottle, flecc.Machines are not fundamental consequences of the environment on earth so the reverse could never happen.
I fully understand what you're saying but believe you are missing some fundamentals.Would a world dominated by intelligent machines need to keep the human race?
one possible step in the future evolution is a kind of Borg, humans with machine implants,1) Such an advanced intelligence would require purpose to exist and there is none. We have no purpose to exist but are equipped with a survival instinct forcing our continuation. Since that is biological the machines don't have that survival instinct so have no purpose to continue. At some early point in their evolution their super intelligence would realise the utter pointlessness.
it can be accidental but we are very capable of self destruct.There are plenty of capable nutters out there.2) Why would the machines wipe out the human race?
Agreed on both, I believe we are much more likely than the machines to wipe ourselves out. We've certainly had plenty of practice.one possible step in the future evolution is a kind of Borg, humans with machine implants,
it can be accidental but we are very capable of self destruct.There are plenty of capable nutters out there.
I like Google maps/navigator. Much better than the cars own sat nav in use but the best part is ease of use.. I was going to a hotel in Scotland so tapped the microphone symbol and said "navigate to " naming the hotel and town.. no post code but it didn't need it.. did you know you can download the map to save data? And as you say the redirect is excellent..I was driving back from Essex today, and though I didn't need it for navigation because I know the journey very well, I switched on Google navigation on my phone because the roads were packed with Xmas travellers, so I was expecting trouble.
As I was driving up the motorway, it said, "There's congestion ahead. I've plotted a route around it that will save you 18 minutes, press confirm to accept". It did that twice during the journey. A third time, it warned me that there was congestion ahead due to an accident, but I was still on the fastest route and there would be a 6minute delay. I thought it was brilliant - a really good use of real-time information collected from the masses for their advantage.
When I went up to Yorkshire last week,I started it just before I set off. It gave me an ETA that was correct to the minute even though there were slowdowns due to roadworks. It seems uncanny how accurate it always is.
that's the current hot topic in computing. You can see web sites like google or Bing would rarely or ever stops working. The hardware is now the cloud, there are already self repairing web apps."The rise of the machines" maybe, or rather "The problem with machines"
Is there any machine that can function without constant attention, including software 'updates' by humans?
Or rather, could we afford one, if there were?
The answer is..
"Sorry this application/your car/your implant has encountered a problem and needs to close, goodbye!"
Cheers, Mikel
There are also new programming systems where the programmers only need to specify their goals then leave the job of creating the code to the machine. The latter of course fixes itself.The first time a particular problem is encountered, the application is closed down. It then develops several potential fixes, trying each to determine the best fix available. That fix is then applied automatically if the same anomaly is encountered again – without closing the application if possible.
And there again is the fundamental weakness. All fine while a human programmer gives it goals, but what goals would a machine have without biological instincts?There are also new programming systems where the programmers only need to specify their goals then leave the job of creating the code to the machine. The latter of course fixes itself.
Imagine one day, some programmer would instruct the machine 'your new goal is to improve yourself'.