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2 min readFeb 17, 2022

All you need to know about Artificial Intelligence and the future of humans

I will give a brief introduction to AI (Artificial Intelligence). Will artificial intelligence take over the world? Will artificial intelligence eventually wipe out humanity? What could such an acquisition look like? Like Robot Rebellion? Can AI start making its own goals? Can AI realize that people no longer need to achieve their goals and think people are on the way? Will the artificial intelligence of the future be able to create a new copy of itself? Will the artificial intelligence we develop today eventually begin to believe that it knows what’s best for us? Will artificial intelligence help us liberate humans or enslave us?

Artificial super-intelligence that makes humans excel in all fields
These questions are not just for filmmakers and novelists — but are central questions for researchers working to develop artificial intelligence. The problem that artificial intelligence can take over the world and wipe out all human beings is far in the future as no one has yet succeeded in developing artificial intelligence that has high general intelligence like humans. Artificial intelligence can already perform many specialized tasks much better than humans, but today no artificial intelligence can surpass the overall intelligence of a person.

However, scientists are confident that they will eventually manage to develop artificial super-intelligence that will surpass humans in all areas. We are not there yet. But there are many ethical issues with today’s applications of artificial intelligence. Researchers have already built artificial intelligence that some observers say can pass the Turing test.

What is Turing Test?
What is Turing Test? Alan Turing was a British mathematician — and war hero — who not only contributed to the development of machines that contributed to the victory against Germany during World War II, but also laid the foundation for today’s computers and computer science. In 1950, Turing developed a test in which a test person wrote messages to two recipients — one recipient was a machine, and the other recipient was a human. If the test person cannot determine whether the answers came from another human or machine, the machine is considered to have passed the test. No machine passed the Turing test during Turing’s lifetime. But some scientists believe that the artificial intelligence we have today can pass the Turing test. However, most researchers believe that no computer has yet passed the Turing test.

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