Perhaps the new Turing Test will be a demonstration of an ability of a superintelligent
AI to successfully manipulate group of highly intelligent persons who have been
pre-warned that such a test was to be held, in a manner  such that none of them is aware they are being manipulated.  The AI would set down in advance the outcome it would achieve, and perhaps time parameters and resource limits it would utilize.
It should provide detailed documentation of its  overall strategy in advance of the test as well.

MFJ



On 9/13/06, Matt Mahoney <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
From: Russell Wallace < [EMAIL PROTECTED]>
I stated that a less intelligent entity cannot predict the behavior of a more intelligent entity.  By intelligence, I mean information content, or Kolmogorov complexity.

>By that definition, a cloud of gas in thermal equilibrium is superintelligent. I think you need a new definition :P

That is a problem, isn't it.  I'm afraid I don't have a good answer.  The Turing test has been around since 1950 and so far nobody has come up with anything better.  And how is a Turing test able to distinguish between human and superhuman?
 
-- Matt Mahoney, [EMAIL PROTECTED]


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