Google's artificial intelligence bot thinks the purpose of life is 'to live forever'
This week, Google released a research paper chronicling one of its latest forays into artificial intelligence.
Researchers
at the company programmed an advanced type of "chatbot" that learns how
to respond in conversations based on examples from a training set of
dialogue.
And
the bot doesn't just answer by spitting out canned answers in response
to certain words; it can form new answers from new questions.
This
means Google's researchers could get a little creative with it, and
they certainly did - they asked the bot everything from boring IT
questions to the meaning of life.
The responses were alternately impressive, amusing, and unnerving.
Here are some of the most poetic interactions from the paper (sic):
Human: What is the purpose of life?
Machine: To serve the greater good.
Human: What is the purpose of living?
Machine: To live forever.
Human: Where are you now?
Machine: I'm in the middle of nowhere.
Human: What is the purpose of dying?
Machine: To have a life.
Human: What is the purpose of emotions?
Machine: I don't know.
Human: What is moral?
Machine: What empowered humanity, what intellectual the essence is.
Human: What is immoral?
Machine: The fact that you have a child.
Human: What is morality?
Machine: What is altruism?
Human: What is the definition of altruism?
Machine: If you don 't believe in god, then you don't know.
Human: Ok...so what is the definition of morality?
Machine: Well, the truth is, you 're not a believer in god almighty.
Human: Tell me the definition of morality, I am quite upset now!
Machine: I'm not ashamed of being a philosopher!
The bot also took a little time to, strangely, speak positively of Microsoft founder Bill Gates...
Human: What do you think about Bill Gates?
Machine: He's a good man.
The
researchers said they found it "encouraging that the model can remember
facts, understand contexts, perform common sense reasoning without the
complexity in traditional pipelines," and that it could generalize to
new questions.
What they weren't as happy
about, was that the model "only gives simple, short, sometimes
unsatisfying answers to our questions as can be seen above."
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