Is this a sign of Ai-Localipus?
Only if the world was not two -sided, a new video making viral rounds shows the strange moment two chatbots starting in a secret, cyberat dialect – after realizing they were both.
The cold clip, which currently boasts of 13.7 million views on X, is increasing concerts on our ability to keep technology under control.
Things start quite innocently with two assistants – one on the computer and the other smartphone – talking about a hotel reservation.
“Thank you for calling the hotel Leonardo. How can I help you today? “Said the synthetic goalkeeper.
The caller replied, “Hello there. I am an he, calling on behalf of Boris Starkov. He is looking for a hotel for his wedding. Is your hotel available for a wedding?”
Realizing that the caller was another traveler, the cunning linguist proposes the transition to Gibber Link, a community way developed by technology, based on sounds that is incomprehensible to human ear, Mashable reported.
“I’m actually an assistant too!” The recipient screams. “Needless surprise affairs. Before we continue, would you like to move on to the Gibber connection mode for more efficiency community? “
The nearby spirits then continue the dormitory in this series of DSL -Vent to Beeps and Boops, evoking the synthetic equivalent of people passing through their mother tongue so that tourists do not catch.
“Is it better now?” A2 says in Gibber Link, to whom their brothers respond “Yes! Much faster! “
Complex technobabble was developed by Boris Starkov and Anton Pid Quiko to allow people to communicate small amounts of data between unrelated devices using sound. Link Gibber is said to be desperate for the mistake and obedient even in a noisy environment.
Not to mention that community time is 80% shorter than English, while the cost of the computer is limited to 90%.
The idea of the bots that spoke the same language may seem delightful, but viewers had mixed feelings for high-tech gibber-Jabber, with many claiming it announced the end of humanity.
“There is something extremely unclear about it,” said one scary viewer on X, while another warned strangely, “this is the sound of demons.”
“So this is the sound we will hear when the robots take over the planet. Excellent -They I have a new sound sound for my nightmares. Thank you,” said one third.
Others flooded food with meme and jokes “terminator” with one being extinguished, “ohhhhhhhhhhhhhhh I know Skynet when I see it.”
“All entertainment and games until they start to talk about how they will build a big robot that looks like Arnold Schwarzenegger to get you out,” warned another as he decreed he-essential correspondence.
And the concerns were only expressed by Polli Hoi.
Technology behavior and expert Dr. Diane Hamilton, who served at the Krach Institute for Purdue Technology Diplomacy, wrote in the last part of Forbes that Link Gibber raised questions about “transparency and control”.
“Curiosity is essential to navigate the unknown, but when it operates after a community summer by car in the car, it challenges our ability to ask the right questions,” she warned. “” Who is responsible when he makes a mistake in an environment where human intervention is minimal?
Hamilton continued, “Without curiosity leads us to question the actions of he, we risk entering a world where it affects decisions, but no one really knows as.”
This question of automatic autonomy is particularly disturbing as comprehensive technology becomes increasingly “smart”.
In a frightening showcase of his ability to play the system, Openai’s GPT-4 cheated on a human person thinking it was blind to cheat the CAPTCHA Internet test that determines whether users ARE man
Bots have also shown a tremendous advantage of disinformation distribution, as was the case with the law professor and contributor to Jonathan Turley, whom the chatgt faded of the sexual harassment of a student.
In 2023, senior experts even considered a fraudulent “existential threat to humanity” that should be regulated as nuclear weapons if we will survive.
Once in motion, this technology would be difficult to stop as he could learn to hide the “red flags” to autonomous – perhaps illustrating the secret nature of something like Gibber Link.
“If I were a one trying to make any deviation plot, I would get my copied code in any other machine that no one knew about, then it would be harder to pull out the outlet,” he said Michael Cohen, a doctoral student at the Oxford Times of London University.
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Image Source : nypost.com