Yaarel
🇮🇱 🇺🇦 He-Mage
Right that is the Turing Test. One is unable to discern whether one is speaking to a human or an AI.I’m considerably more worried about them becoming able to pass reverse Turing tests (like CAPTCHA). With how automated so many of our important processes are, once the computers can convince each other that they’re human, it won’t really matter if we can tell them apart from other humans or not.
By my sense of being unable to distinguish an AI, the Turing AI can pass CAPTCHA tests as well as a human does.
You bring up a good point, that computers wouldnt be able distinguish from each other from humans. On the other hand, that threshold would be brief, since the computers could easily do routines that humans are unable to do, like rapid complex math calculations, thus demonstrate they are an AI and not a human.
Maybe there can be technological interfaces, sotospeak a high tech mask that allows humans to impersonate a computer.
I realize you are also worrying about computers deceptively impersonating humans to bypass security, which I assume it can − as well as the human oneself.
Heh, by the way, I am not a fan of CAPTCHA tests, because the tests themselves are often wrong. For example, if one needs to pick the squares that contain parts of a motorcycle in it, there can be one square with only the tip of a handlebar. And the CAPTCHA might not count that square when it should. Or to pick the squares with traffic lights, it counts the bulbs themselves, but might or might not count the rest of the casing of the traffic light. If the tests are wrong, the results are uncertain.