Inspired by Isaac Asimov’s Three Laws of Robotics, Google wrote a ‘Robot Constitution’ to make sure its new AI droids won’t kill us::AutoRT, a data gathering AI system for robots, has safety prompts inspired by Isaac Asimov’s Three Laws of Robotics that it applies while deciding what task to attempt.
Asimov’s Three Laws of Robotics are a plot device that are designed to initially look good and then fail spectacularly in a fiction book. Not sure they are the best to base your Robot Constitution on.
Uglyhead@lemmy.world 10 months ago
Yeah, I’ve heard this one before.
‘We Promise To Not Be Evil’,…unless it gets in the way of profit some years from now…
Embrace Goodness, Extend Goodness,… Extinguish Goodness
Fooled us once… We won’t get fooled again.
TheFriar@lemm.ee 10 months ago
Lol a little off topic but I love how Bush’s idiot mouth has ruined the “fool me once” idiom forever
Beardsley@lemmy.world 10 months ago
What happened, most likely, is, he screwed it up because he realized he couldn’t say “shame on me” without it being a soundbite on every news outlet. Better to appear dumb than personally apologetic to a national tragedy.
Uglyhead@lemmy.world 10 months ago
Ha I’m glad someone picked up what I was putting down there.
I didn’t wanna have to go back and look at the video of the turds falling out of Bush’s mouth again, but I finally did:
"There’s an old saying in Tennessee—I know it’s in Texas, probably in Tennessee—that says, ‘Fool me once,…shame on— shame on you— fool me can’t get fooled again’
NeoNachtwaechter@lemmy.world 10 months ago
Oh yes, we will.
Because “we” is the general public, who has made google rich. Why wouldn’t they repeat the stupidity? What should have changed?
Uglyhead@lemmy.world 10 months ago
It was sort of a play on the old quote:
"There’s an old saying in Tennessee—I know it’s in Texas, probably in Tennessee—that says, ‘Fool me once,…shame on— shame on you— fool me can’t get fooled again’
—Bush
And a mixing of Who lyrics.
basically implying that I am a fool, we are fools, we will fool ourselves, and get fooled again.
Me: Spending hours upon hours with me and my friends playing around on what was then called “GOOG-411”, training early language models that would then eventually years later become part of the reason Google Assistant was so ahead of its time.
Looking upon with shame years later; the massive push by everyone half-way familiar with a computer pushed everyone else to switch to Google Chrome Browser.