pameladean (
pameladean) wrote2016-04-24 01:24 pm
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Artificial sort-of intelligence
So some bit of Windows 10, which installed myself on my laptop a while back because I failed to tell it not to emphatically enough, wants to show me different background photos when I first wake the computer up. There's a link in the upper right-hand corner that says "Like what you see?" and you can say either "Not a fan" or "I want more!" I have dutifully been clicking on whichever of those is nearest my preference. This is supposed to be collaborative communication, but it's often felt more like a battle.
I had approved of a number of nature shots with interesting light effects. At some point, I kept being shown photos with similar lighting effects, but either the scene was fantasticated in a way that I didn't like, or the lighting was showing tools or buildings. It took a very long time of repeatedly disavowing such photos before Windows 10 decided that it was tired of this unappreciative nonsense and would just start showing me scenes from national parks.
So it's all worked out, but I did a lot of muttering in the meantime. "No, I told you, I don't really want to see broken-down cars, artfully-arranged garden tools all in sepia, or strangely-distorted castles first thing in the morning." I couldn't help feeling that the software involved was muttering things back at me. "Oh, come on, in essential ways this is just like that forest one you liked. Give me a break!"
Pamela
I had approved of a number of nature shots with interesting light effects. At some point, I kept being shown photos with similar lighting effects, but either the scene was fantasticated in a way that I didn't like, or the lighting was showing tools or buildings. It took a very long time of repeatedly disavowing such photos before Windows 10 decided that it was tired of this unappreciative nonsense and would just start showing me scenes from national parks.
So it's all worked out, but I did a lot of muttering in the meantime. "No, I told you, I don't really want to see broken-down cars, artfully-arranged garden tools all in sepia, or strangely-distorted castles first thing in the morning." I couldn't help feeling that the software involved was muttering things back at me. "Oh, come on, in essential ways this is just like that forest one you liked. Give me a break!"
Pamela
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I'm sure that mine is commiserating with it, or would if I actually clicked on the "like" and "dislike" things more often than I do. Because it would also have to deal with the fact that my preferences are very variant depending on my mood.
(On the other hand, it also rolled a critical success for which I forgive it much -- in its repertoire there's a picture of a crystal ball sitting on a beach looking for all the world like a water droplet, and the photo is one of those that's about how the beach looks all upside down when seen through the sphere. It greeted me with this one a few weeks ago when a thing happened that seemed to turn my emotional world upside down. It seemed ... very appropriate, and sort of meaningful about the power of perception and such.)
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The little "X" in the corner still works, but I expect soon it will say "Close this window to begin your free upgrade." I remain vigilant.
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I feel fortunate that, since I failed to avert the upgrade, it doesn't seem to have done any harm.
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All of which goes to prove that you do not actually need a sentient computer to pass a Turing Test, a sufficiently anthropomorphising human will do.
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You make me wonder, suddenly, if people who don't properly treat some other people as fully human also anthropomorphise their computers. Probably they do because people are not at all consistent.
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