Click here to Skip to main content
15,893,487 members

Survey Results

Do we, as developers, have a responsibility to ensure we maintain control of artificial intelligence based systems?

Survey period: 21 May 2018 to 28 May 2018

If we build a system more intelligent than us, how can we be sure it's safe?

OptionVotes% 
Yes, absolutely33832.72
Yes, if we can858.23
Yes, but the responsibility is shared with other disciplines25524.69
Some systems yes, some no605.81
No, it's not our responsbililty494.74
No, it will be impossible11511.13
I don't know928.91
Other (please comment)393.78



 
GeneralThis is a mirror, this is your reflection Pin
Mitchster26-May-18 4:47
Mitchster26-May-18 4:47 
GeneralGive me the problem. Pin
NotUnique24-May-18 8:20
professionalNotUnique24-May-18 8:20 
GeneralYou can't control your child like a puppet Pin
Kewin Rausch24-May-18 8:19
professionalKewin Rausch24-May-18 8:19 
GeneralThere's no "we" in that "developers" ... (nuff said). Pin
RedDk23-May-18 8:01
RedDk23-May-18 8:01 
GeneralULTROOOOOOOOOOOOON! Pin
Joan M23-May-18 5:25
professionalJoan M23-May-18 5:25 
GeneralDo we, as developers, have a responsibility to ensure we maintain control of artificial intelligence based systems? Pin
Alan Burkhart22-May-18 11:50
Alan Burkhart22-May-18 11:50 
GeneralRe: Do we, as developers, have a responsibility to ensure we maintain control of artificial intelligence based systems? Pin
CodeWraith23-May-18 23:12
CodeWraith23-May-18 23:12 
GeneralThe two faces of tomorrow Pin
kalberts22-May-18 9:40
kalberts22-May-18 9:40 
GeneralOther: Absolutely not Pin
Manuele Camilletti22-May-18 5:17
professionalManuele Camilletti22-May-18 5:17 
GeneralYes! Pin
HobbyProggy22-May-18 3:10
professionalHobbyProggy22-May-18 3:10 
GeneralRe: Yes! Pin
gihrig22-May-18 9:08
gihrig22-May-18 9:08 
GeneralRe: Yes! Pin
kalberts22-May-18 9:42
kalberts22-May-18 9:42 
GeneralRe: Yes! Pin
CodeWraith23-May-18 23:13
CodeWraith23-May-18 23:13 
GeneralOther: we should take a hands off approach Pin
den2k8822-May-18 2:23
professionalden2k8822-May-18 2:23 
GeneralRe: Other: we should take a hands off approach Pin
CodeWraith23-May-18 23:15
CodeWraith23-May-18 23:15 
GeneralRe: Other: we should take a hands off approach Pin
den2k8823-May-18 23:41
professionalden2k8823-May-18 23:41 
GeneralRe: Other: we should take a hands off approach Pin
CodeWraith24-May-18 0:15
CodeWraith24-May-18 0:15 
GeneralIt wont be safe Pin
MKJCP22-May-18 1:27
MKJCP22-May-18 1:27 
GeneralRe: It wont be safe Pin
Alan Burkhart22-May-18 11:42
Alan Burkhart22-May-18 11:42 
GeneralIt is impossible Pin
Daniel Pfeffer21-May-18 20:53
professionalDaniel Pfeffer21-May-18 20:53 
GeneralRe: It is impossible Pin
Daniel Wilianto21-May-18 23:40
Daniel Wilianto21-May-18 23:40 
GeneralRe: It is impossible Pin
Laiju k22-May-18 0:34
professionalLaiju k22-May-18 0:34 
GeneralRe: It is impossible Pin
kalberts22-May-18 10:25
kalberts22-May-18 10:25 
I don't like your approach. It seems to reflect "The way I grew up with is the only GOOD way."

I see an increasing number of (professional) writers bemoaning that the world is no longer as in their childhood. A prime example is Neil Postman in his "The disappearance of childhood": If the artifacts of his own upbringing in the mid-1900s USA is not present, then a child does not have a real childhood.

I am a generation younger than Postman, and smile at (and reject) his "childhood" expectations. And then, I look at my own offspring, thinking of the distance to my childhood, and of the smiles that might bring. I have become a lot more aware of how much my own childhood artifacts resemble, or at least classify similarly to, Postman's artifacts. And how my parent time artifacts in the 1990s different from parenthood nowadays: They are age old, seen from my grandchildren's view.

All cultures develop. No parent, or grandparent, or great grandparent, can have any expectation of things staying the same. I am an old grumpy man myself, but when I read other old grumpy men's writings about how everything really never should change, I frown. Of course it should change! The kids are not "worse", they are just different. Or, they do it "their way".

This is human. It has always been that way. And the fundamental nature of the human mind stays reasonably unchanged, meaning that changes from one generation to another is essentially "under control". By nature, if you like.

We cannot assume a similar gradual, biologically controlled, evolution when we replace biology with technology. One essential point is that we replace seven billion independent logic units with maybe a single-digit number of logic units. At best, a few dozen. These essentially live in their isolated worlds; they have no comptetiton, no "survival of the fittest" (at best: fattest!). The logic is far more rigid, fixed, less adaptive.

I am worried about the lack of robustness of digital life forms. Their digtal DNA is too similar. I fear that this will carry over to the AI age: The effect of controlling one AI class will be far more severe than the effect of spreading one virus to Windows PCs.

And even if we are not talking about viruses... When billions of people willingly pour our all their personal life into one huge "social network", it really doesn't matter if those data are exploited by artificial or commercial intelligence!
GeneralRe: It is impossible Pin
Daniel Pfeffer22-May-18 23:44
professionalDaniel Pfeffer22-May-18 23:44 
GeneralA true AI will become a Philospher Pin
Néstor Sánchez Ahumada21-May-18 14:34
Néstor Sánchez Ahumada21-May-18 14:34 

General General    News News    Suggestion Suggestion    Question Question    Bug Bug    Answer Answer    Joke Joke    Praise Praise    Rant Rant    Admin Admin   

Use Ctrl+Left/Right to switch messages, Ctrl+Up/Down to switch threads, Ctrl+Shift+Left/Right to switch pages.