hollydolly
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Popular AI chatbots like ChatGPT and Bard have been designed to replicate human speech as closely as possible.
And as deep learning technology gets more and more sophisticated, it's becoming difficult to discern these computer models from real people.
Now, a free online game gives you two minutes to have a conversation with someone (or something) and guess whether they're a fellow human or an AI.
'Human or not?' was inspired by the Turing Test, devised by legendary British computer scientist Alan Turing in 1950.
A computer passes the so-called test when someone cannot correctly tell the difference between a response from a human and a response from an AI.
When you start the game, either you or your chat partner is picked to begin the conversation.
You can then talk about anything you like for two minutes – although the participant might leave the conversation before the time's up, even if they're an AI.
At the end, you have to select who you think you were speaking to – a real person somewhere in the world or an autonomous computer program.
MailOnline had 10 conversations and was able to correctly guess whether it was human or a bot six times.
But overall the AI convincingly replicated human speech – making it a tricky albeit fun puzzle.
try it here.. I asked it a couple of questions.. and it had me fooled into thinking it was a real person..
https://www.humanornot.ai/
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-11995997/Can-tell-difference-real-person-AI-bot.html
And as deep learning technology gets more and more sophisticated, it's becoming difficult to discern these computer models from real people.
Now, a free online game gives you two minutes to have a conversation with someone (or something) and guess whether they're a fellow human or an AI.
'Human or not?' was inspired by the Turing Test, devised by legendary British computer scientist Alan Turing in 1950.
A computer passes the so-called test when someone cannot correctly tell the difference between a response from a human and a response from an AI.
When you start the game, either you or your chat partner is picked to begin the conversation.
You can then talk about anything you like for two minutes – although the participant might leave the conversation before the time's up, even if they're an AI.
At the end, you have to select who you think you were speaking to – a real person somewhere in the world or an autonomous computer program.
MailOnline had 10 conversations and was able to correctly guess whether it was human or a bot six times.
But overall the AI convincingly replicated human speech – making it a tricky albeit fun puzzle.
try it here.. I asked it a couple of questions.. and it had me fooled into thinking it was a real person..
https://www.humanornot.ai/
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-11995997/Can-tell-difference-real-person-AI-bot.html