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19:00
There is also the concern that true intelligent machines could be a threat.
Artificial neural networks have next to nothing to do with real ones though
@Luggage much like automobiles
@Luggage That's the thing, he's such a fucking amazing guy, he would have. I wasn't joking about that "let's make a computation machine!" story, that's pretty much how it went down.
Huh weird... _(array).reduce(function (arr, item) { /** ... */ }, _.fill(_.range(2), [])) doesn't work, but _(array).reduce(function (arr, item) { /** ... */}, [[], []]) does...
Humans are truly intelligent machines. They are a threat to humanity indeed.
19:00
automobiles, even self-driving, aren't intelligent. at least not in the way I am speaking
@JanDvorak Then I didn't make clear what I meant by an assembly line: You have a line of instructions, with one machine carrying them out. You don't have a line of data with several machines operating on them.
they won't have desires.
@JanDvorak makes sense
@Luggage Define "desires"
Is it a car's desire to reach its destination?
self-made goals derived from it's needs for survival and any built-in priorities.
19:01
@SomeKittens A general machine learning course
@Zirak That's not an assembly line. But serial processing happens in the brain as well. We call it "consciousness".
@Luggage If it won't reach its destination, it'll be scrapped and sold.
> Because using lists of "truly" random numbers was extremely slow, von Neumann developed a form of making pseudorandom numbers, using the middle-square method. Though this method has been criticized as crude, von Neumann was aware of this: he justified it as being faster than any other method at his disposal, and also noted that when it went awry it did so obviously, unlike methods which could be subtly incorrect.
@Luggage define "self-made"
http://www.commitstrip.com/en/2015/09/24/the-one-who-talks-too-much/
CommitStrip - Blog relating the daily life of web agencies developers
The one who talks too much
CommitStrip
1443121173
19:02
I like his reasoning
"It goes wrong sometimes, but it's obvious"
but it has no intelligence, it's just a fancy algorithm. I'm talking about human-level intelligence or conciousness.
define "intelligence"
@Luggage When can you tell the difference between a fancy algorithm and intelligence?
What's "consciousness"?
I can't, but self-driving cars are not that.
Yet!
19:03
@copy Fair. I'll look into it when things die down here.
Why not? They are pretty much self-aware
user1596138
@SterlingArcher Scuba valve hahaha
well, right. If you could make a machine that could actually be creative, you'd want it driving your car. A machine that can actually solve problems instead of saying "error".
@Luggage Look up "Paperclip Maximiser"
I don't need to. :)
19:04
@LanaKane shut up lol
user1596138
I really do want a snorkel. I know people think it's the most pointless mod but have you ever sucked too much water and blown an engine? I have
that's the argument I'm making.
user1596138
Also it doubles as a Air Ram
the differnce is that a self-driving car only has limited ways of salving problems and they are all human-directed. The human-level intelligent paperclip maximizer would solve it's own problems, which is where the danger may be.
@Luggage We have machines that can solve a variety of problems much better than a human can, and they nearly never say "error".
A trivial example is a Sudoku solver
19:05
Yea, but they solve specific problems, not think for themselves and be creative.
Rubix cube solver
not even comparable to a intelligent machine.
@Luggage You're thinking imperatively
no, you are.
user1596138
Those solvers are programmatic
19:06
"To solve problem X, do A B C"
You just have to extend the state space to encompass human life
user1596138
They do exactly what they were designed to do, they do not solve a problem they merely run a predefined solution.
That's not how intelligent things act. The trivial example of a Sudoku solver is given "here's the rules of Sudoku, here's a table, solve"
class RubixCubeSolver inherits HumanAI {
    doRubixStuff();
}
ok, still am not talking about a sudoko solver.
19:07
then, are you saying only humans are truly intelligent because they can cope with problems that humans regularly encounter?
@Zirak Unfortunately, no computer can do that. You have to teach it BFS at the very least.
Great. A company I used to work at was building intelligent security cameras. We never told it what "danger" is. We gave it a lot of footage, and it decided for itself that branches moving in the wind are cool, but a car suddenly blowing past isn't.
yah, none of you could extract a blarkch out of zomblax
user1596138
Humans are a terrible example of actual intelligence
user1596138
19:08
@Zirak Real story, or made up for the point?
@SomeKittens Real story. It was the coolest thing.
Surely you see a difference between human-level intelligence where you can describe any problem and it can solve it vs a program that is designed to solve a single problem by comparing some numbers.
self-learning AIs are a thing. But you still want to check their results.
@Zirak sweet. Sounds like a lot of fun
@Luggage artifical neural networks, bam
19:09
We also installed one at a construction site which was situated in a highway. There were some flags which constantly flapped around in the wind, and it thought they were dangerous. After a day of constant alerts, it stopped alerting about them.
A company I used to work for had a CRUD interface with an external API twist! Exciting!
@Zirak "try to categorise the input and report any category that happens with a frequency < f"?
user1596138
@Zirak That's not intelligence that's just recognizing how often something happens.
@durbnpoisn use your google-fu. — Sterling Archer 50 secs ago
@JanDvorak You can solve it in a lot of ways
19:11
@LanaKane intelligence is all about pattern recognition
@LanaKane And if we were monkeys we'd have explicitly coded it that way. But we weren't and we didn't, which is why I think it's cool.
> He was an extraordinary child prodigy in the areas of language, memorization, and mathematics. As a 6-year-old, he could divide two 8-digit numbers in his head
@Zirak so in otherwords, to bypass this construction security system, I would just have to flap like a flag
Real smart
@SterlingArcher You're one bendy SOB
user1596138
function cameraSawSomwething(thing) {
  thingsIveSeen[thing]++;
  if (thingsIveSeen[thing] > howManyOfThingAreDangerous[thing]) {
    // derp I saw something dangerous
    // intelligence FTW!!!
  }
}
19:12
@LanaKane that's not that intelligent
That's the monkey way of doing it
1 min ago, by Zirak
@LanaKane And if we were monkeys we'd have explicitly coded it that way. But we weren't and we didn't, which is why I think it's cool.
@Zirak you gotta be bendy to impersonate flags, brah
user1596138
@JanDvorak Ofc not
19:13
hehe
right. Johnny 5 in intelligent. How a lightning strike did that to 80's tech, I don't know.
But he's a lot more versatile than solving sudoku.
What I mean, there's no magical ingredient to consciousness or intelligence. It's just that it's really hard. And the human brain is a pretty good piece of hardware for that kind of task.
agree
Then why are we stuck with stupid hardware :(
but there could be some emergent behavior in a complex system that acts as the 'magic ingredient'.
Why can't we have nice things
19:15
I wonder if biological hardware is possible in our lifetime
Humans suck at creating biological machines. All they can do is to take a piece of something existing and let it duplicate itself.
but we humans also make things like this:
Anyway, read about von Neumann. He's a total badass.
How dare you speak that way about Dolly
@SomeKittens how's that intelligence?
19:18
@JanDvorak for now.. but even that can do some neat things.
@copy food?
we can basically take a really basic bacterium and replace it's dna to program it.
@BadgerCat k
then let it divide. It's also tech that could make the world awesome or destroy it
user1596138
19:19
I mean.... Depending on what you call biotech
user1596138
We already have biological transistors
One theory is that art exists because analysing a state space helps compress the data about that state space (verbal language, graphical language), which reduces the food intake, which gives an evolutionary advantage to long-lived creatures practicing art.
user1596138
But I think you guys jumped clean over biohardware and started talking some weird hybrid brain/machine cluster
@Zirak
19:21
Pizza!!!
Let's just take a self-learning neural network and reward it for artistic appeal. After some time you should get an artifical artist.
ray kurzwiel already did that
doing as much with as little energy (food) as possible would be an evolutionary advantage in almost all situations.
Is it just me, is is the line on the right slice of pizza very clean
dat cut
We already have an artificial neural network that can recognize images. We also have software that can tweak an image to increase the output of that neural network. The results are... freaky.
look up "deep dream"
19:24
@JanDvorak check out "AARON"
AARON is a software program written by artist Harold Cohen that creates original artistic images. Proceeding from Cohen's initial question "What are the minimum conditions under which a set of marks functions as an image?", AARON has been in continual development since 1973. The name "AARON" does not seem to be an acronym, rather it was a name chosen to start with the letter "A" so that the names of successive programs could follow it alphabetically. Initial versions of AARON created abstract drawings that grew more complex through the 1970s. More representational imagery was added in the 1980s...
sorry it wasn't Ray
but iirc Ray did have a decent role in its development / training
@rlemon and now i feel hungry
@rlemon which city are you in ?
@rlemon did lorem pizza just grow by one image?
no but I should make a submission path available
@Abhishrek kitchener
:D ok
a submission path? soon to be lorem porn.
19:28
will you shoot me if I drop by to say hello ? Next monthsish
no but i may wedgie you
canadians don't shoot people.
sure we do
Never even bring their guns to the mall.
we shoot cops like it isn't a big deal
19:31
It is a big deal anywhere else
I can imagine shooting a cop in the USA with a water gun wouldn't end well
really depends on the cop and the circumstance, just like anywhere
I remember a 12yo losing their life that way
a surprise, out of the blue? not a good idea.
never the best idea..
"BOO!"
I've said it many times, but I'll say it again. Fuck Lenovo!
19:34
Lenovo Customer Feedback Program 64
lol
wow lenovo
@JanDvorak pop tart gun?
user1596138
@rlemon They have some really pretty hardware on the higher end tho
@copy looks like my meeting will last another hour
"meeting"
@SterlingArcher water pistol painted black
user1596138
19:40
@rlemon They're just people....
Ah. i'm assuming they left no color so the officer had to treat it as a potential weapon
@LanaKane citation-needed
@SterlingArcher still, shooting a 12yo dead?
user1596138
@JanDvorak Why?
user1596138
If I thought a 12 year old had a gun pointed at me, I'm sorry, but I'd like to think that I would shoot :/
@LanaKane reason-not-needed
19:41
Yeah I don't know. Was the 12 year old threatening him?
What was the situation?
yea, which case of shooting a child are you talking about?
He was threatening to "shoot" him. But surely there is a better way of dispatching a child?
user1596138
^fucking moron.
Sometimes you can't be too careful
user1596138
How can it be any easier to dispatch a 12 year old with a gun vs a 16 year old, vs a 20 year old etc
19:43
@LanaKane The kid is? Well, kinda. Kids tend to be.
user1596138
@JanDvorak No, I just called you a fucking moron Jan. lol
J, go take a walk
that's unnecessary.
user1596138
I know it is. And I'm L now
19:44
still go take a walk, that was uncalled for.
What was?
user1596138
Because you want to say no matter what the situation, because it was a child the officer should've found a better way to deal.
user1596138
I'm sorry but this is the real world, dude.
user1596138
Not our chat room.
In the real world, you shoot kids on sight
19:44
Calm down Hoopins, it's all good
Not because of that. But I thought the usual way was to incapacitate, not kill?
I think rlemon meant L, not J
his name starts with a J
so I called him J
not his handle, his name
@JanDvorak for the sake of logistics, what do you consider incapacitate?
user1596138
19:45
You think you're genuinely going to be shot you shoot back. End of story afai-concerned
@SterlingArcher non-lethal force.
user1596138
Don't make people think you are going to kill them if you don't want them to kill you...
is Lana Kane somone from the room? how do I see previous names?
@SterlingArcher I guess a leg would have been better than a torso.
Like shooting the kid in his trigger arm?
19:45
@Luggage Jhawins
user1596138
What stops someone with a bullet in their knee from still shooting you?
@LanaKane explain that to a 12yo
@LanaKane Those 12 year olds are fucking beasts
@LanaKane their gun now lies on the ground
user1596138
19:46
@JanDvorak It's actually really easy to explain. "Don't act like you're trying to kill people Johnny, they might take it serious and kill you"
most kids that age have no sense of real mortality
user1596138
@JanDvorak Oh? They automatically unclench their hand? I think it works the other way around actually, I grab harder when I get surprised.
Most likely, but there's a chance that a) the kid has major balls and maintains the weapon, or b) the "incapacitating shot" triggers a reflex squeen
I guess the primary fail was that he got hold of an all-black fake pistol
well, yea, we'd need to know the situation. I can't say a cop should NEVER shoot a 12 year old, but I'd be damn curious at to why it happened.
user1596138
19:47
^ agree
user1596138
Look at my avatar
I agree, primary fail was the parents not warning a kid that if you wave something that looks like a real gun at a cop, you're gonna have a bad time
user1596138
I am qualified to dispatch all conversations of gun control/misuse because Lana
Or if they did, Darwinism strikes again.
or even that he had the gun in the first place.
19:48
I still agree with Jan, we shouldn't be shooting people to kill.
it's not even a conversation about gun control.
kid or no kid
i agree with that, too, mostly.
Luggage is right, at this current time we're more or less discussing the effects of shooting a child xD
the only "but" is that when given a non-lethal way of applying force, cops tend to use it to enforce compliance, not jsut deal with threats
but that's just because humans are dicks.
19:49
in other words, you trade guns for tasers, you'll ahve less people shot, but a lot more tased, some of which can't handle it or didn't deserve it.
Humans are taught to be dicks, they aren't born that way
Self-made food for the win
Did you grow the veggies?
I will admit, many cops are overly aggressive, but other people don't like to admit that many people are just as aggressive to cops, regardless of age (yes, even kids), and cops are trained to defend themselves in many potentially threatening situations
But yeah, I'm done here. Back to work
19:50
yea, i know some real assholes that should be on the news any day now.
@JanDvorak Actually, yes
user1596138
I'm on the cops side of this civilians vs. cops thing... Also going back to work
Not all of them
i'm on the side of whoever is right, doesn't matter if they are cop or not.
(who I perceive as right, obviously)
19:51
I agree with "trained to defend". But I'm still convinced they should have said "reflexes" rather than "I was afraid the kid could have shot me"
plus that non-lethal force thing
and a sense of righteousness
hi guys can you kindly please look the question

http://stackoverflow.com/questions/32723669/clone-validation-using-jquery-partially-working
too bad I can't closevote that
user1596138
Have any of you been arrested at gunpoint
not arrested, but searched.
user1596138
19:54
At gunpoint they searched you? That is some excessive force then, yeah.
and the didn't point guns at me the whole time, just held them in front of themselves. it was on a military base.
they had m16s
you've asked for help with that Q three times in here today and once in the HTML room
just a checkpoint. some guys with m16s told me to pull over and they were going to search my car. I said ok.
this was before 9/11. Back then you could just drive onto the military base. there were no gates.
user1596138
Yea I about got torn up by the dogs only to have the officers call them off and rush guns in my face lol.
what for?
you try to get onto the white house lawn?
user1596138
I climbed a pile of rocks 50yards from the park.
user1596138
The officers only know what they get told over the radio
which is 'kill kill kill'
user1596138
19:57
Apparently they were told there was a much more severe situation going on lol
user1596138
And damn they are sneaky it was like 2am I shoulda heard one of 4 cars pull up..
my father drove home one day, then a bunch of cops pulled in behind him and drew guns. he fit the description of a bank robber.
user1596138
Anyway point is they had guns in my face and did not shoot me. So there, it happens hahaha
user1596138
Also FYI all charges dropped and arrest marked "wrongful"
19:59
sometimes they run out of ammo after murdering children.
user1596138
LOL
user1596138
My town was poor, I'd be surprised if they have ammo to begin with
Their magazines are full of IOUs.
user1596138
Hahaha

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