The DishBrain’s advanced learning capabilities, in other words, could underpin a new generation of machine learning, particularly when embodied in autonomous vehicles, drones, and robots. It could give them, says Razi, “a new type of machine intelligence that is able to learn throughout its lifetime.”
literally motherfucking cylons, y’all
Keep them toasters outta my car!
Reminds me of this video
Edit: also this one
Here is an alternative Piped link(s): https://piped.video/V2YDApNRK3g
Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.
I’m open-source, check me out at GitHub.
That unfortunately won’t play the video in Firefox for Android. (At least not for me).
I wonder, at the point where it’s neurons making up a very small piece of tissue, what benefit human cells give over something like a pig (the article does say human and mouse, but still).
I’m so glad I just ordered all of those sweet Cronenburg shirts
Killbot industry: “We would never let a machine make the final decision. There’ll always be a human element involved”
Human element:
The homeopathy of ethical compliance
So they want to make Servitor AI ?
Praise the Omnissiah!
We’re really trying to find a way to boost LLM performance, huh
Aw sweet, man made horrors beyond my comprehension.
I still feel that silicone is more reliable than dealing with organic matter that can die.
How do they keep it alive. Do you need to feed it or keep it in special conditions? With time, as the cells age, would you lose performance?
Once a bunch of nuclear warheads enter puberty we’re all fucked.
My name is Alex James Murphy
That was kinda the other way round. But it’s set in 2028… So maybe.
The thought emporium has a great series of videos of the work they are doing related to this.
It was scary stuff, but radically advanced. I mean, it was smashed, it didn’t work, but…it gave us ideas, took us in new directions. I mean, things we would have never…All my work was based on it. – Miles Dyson, Terminator 2: Judgement Day
So if the paddle hit the ball, the cells would receive a nice, predictable stimulus. But if it missed, the cells would get four seconds of totally unpredictable stimulation.
Ah yes, my second step after building biological AI is definitely “torture it”. This is sure to end well.
Dudun Dun Dudum. Dudun Dun Dudum.
I’m pretty sure if you just search the term “cyberpunk” you’d find at least five stories that start like this.
This has both more potential and more pure horror than any of the bland AI stuff we’ve been obsessing over.