| The question to ask is why? The answer is that we have programmed these systems to do what we require. They cannot exceed but they fail becasue of errors that we have placed in these systems. All of the tasks that you have mentioned have been programmed that way. It has taken human ingenuity to work out how to do this programming. The end result is a machine (non-sentient, non-intelligent) that is doing what we require. If you look at game playing, a system was created to play Go and won and yet that same system fails to win against humans under many circumstances. The literature is there, yet not publicised for all the world to see. A result of keeping the hype in play. If you look at speech recognition, these systems still fail when we humans work against them and yet, we humans still recognise what the machines fail at. Just keep in mind that a tractor can move a greater amount of material than a human can, but it is still only a tool. A plane can travel faster and fly higher that a human can, but it is still only a tool. We use these systems to augment our abilities and yet they are all limited in so many ways that we are not. The upshot is that we can do amazing things with the things we create, but none of those things exist without us and all those things fail without us. |
The successful Go AI were programmed to learn; we still can't program a decent Go AI with rules humans come up with.
> The literature is there
Do you have a link? Two Minute Papers just had a video about an AI systematic finding ways to confound other AI, but I thought we'd passed the point where the best Go AI could be so manipulated by humans…