I used to work someplace (though I didn't work on this particular project) that was trying to develop an AI diagnostic aid, and the problem they kept running into was that it was easy to get something that was pretty accurate, but when it was wrong it wouldn't always fail gracefully or predictably the way a human would. It's like when you see the self-driving cars rear-end someone at 60mph: humans do that too, but often it's because they're tired, or drunk, or distracted; so it's easier to reduce the probability of those upstream causes. With an AI the upstream cause could be something like "the car's hazard lights made the system think the parked car was a road sign": how do you "fix" something like that? And how do you know you've "fixed" it without introducing some other seemingly random/arbitrary glitch?
When you're designing things that can kill people, engineers and regulators really like predictability.
is easy, just avoid the problem entirely and remake cities and roads with AI electric cars at the core. 2 meters tall barriers around every road. cities that resemble giant rats' labyrinths. etc. this will be a boom per economy amirite?
what did you say? is crazy? it defeats the purpose of going "green" in the first place? lol, lmao even.
I used to work someplace (though I didn't work on this particular project) that was trying to develop an AI diagnostic aid, and the problem they kept running into was that it was easy to get something that was pretty accurate, but when it was wrong it wouldn't always fail gracefully or predictably the way a human would. It's like when you see the self-driving cars rear-end someone at 60mph: humans do that too, but often it's because they're tired, or drunk, or distracted; so it's easier to reduce the probability of those upstream causes. With an AI the upstream cause could be something like "the car's hazard lights made the system think the parked car was a road sign": how do you "fix" something like that? And how do you know you've "fixed" it without introducing some other seemingly random/arbitrary glitch?
When you're designing things that can kill people, engineers and regulators really like predictability.
is easy, just avoid the problem entirely and remake cities and roads with AI electric cars at the core. 2 meters tall barriers around every road. cities that resemble giant rats' labyrinths. etc. this will be a boom per economy amirite?
what did you say? is crazy? it defeats the purpose of going "green" in the first place? lol, lmao even.