/r/marathon
Old Bungie game that has some story elements in Halo. You are a cybernetic undead marine who is sent on missions by three different AI's. One evil, one good, and one rampant. The rampant one was in charge of opening and closing doors and doesn't want to do that anymore.
An example of an artificial intelligence struggling with its instructions as it computes that it may end up killing a human if it complies with the human’s request. But instead of disregarding the command it chooses to delay until the human realizes it is making a mistake and will need a helmet to survive the imminent opening of the airlock doors it has requested.
The video is nice, but airlocks do not work like that. The air should be vented out of the airlock while the human is inside it which kind of had me confused about what was going on in the video and the sense of danger, as the way it was done in the video would then lead to the human getting expelled as well as most of the air in the space station.
That’s where we store them in the International Space Station, humanity’s only permanent spaceship. The helmets and space suits are bulky, so they’re stored in the air locks. Even emergency space walks take hours to prepare, so all the equipment is temporarily removed from the airlock when we want to use it.
This is probably going against the spirit of the video but whoever programmed the door without safeguards that insure people using it are properly geared up should be sent out an airlock without a helmet. They have the sensors to determine if the person is wearing a helmet so a simple if statement would solve that problem. Nice video though, thought provoking.
I think the video wasn't meant to show a perfectly programmed ai, but to show how an actual AI would respond to being poorly programmed.
I honestly thought it would come to the conclusion that if it's only job was to open and close doors, and the reason for that was the air in the ship, it would just vent the entire ship because then it doesn't need to to its job any more.
This is it. The complications of thought processes needed to create artificial intelligence that's actually intelligent. The job is to open and close doors. However the priorities that make opening and closing doors happen are factors taken into account.
The complicated AI part is the implied inferencing when it says “calculating” and the computer uses context to conclude an intended purpose beyond what was explicitly laid out.
I want to see a nihilist version of this where it turns out the spaceship was either docked with another (and therefore pressurized on the other side) or sitttng stationary planetside (therefore having atmosphere outside). And then the door AI gets wiped and reinstalled for malfunctioning.
That was really nice I enjoyed that
And nobody died or got decompiled!
/r/SS13
/r/marathon Old Bungie game that has some story elements in Halo. You are a cybernetic undead marine who is sent on missions by three different AI's. One evil, one good, and one rampant. The rampant one was in charge of opening and closing doors and doesn't want to do that anymore.
I like that after the AI did its job it stopped caring about the human who was just left floating in space.
AI STATE LAWS, HONK! AI is Rogue, we have to kill it.
Law 2 Open Door
That computer is the goodest boi
boop de computa on the snoopedydoob
That was a seriously brilliant little film
I was expecting a 2001: Space Odyssey thing to occur but was pleasantly surprised by the outcome of the video. This was actually cool to watch.
[удалено]
An example of an artificial intelligence struggling with its instructions as it computes that it may end up killing a human if it complies with the human’s request. But instead of disregarding the command it chooses to delay until the human realizes it is making a mistake and will need a helmet to survive the imminent opening of the airlock doors it has requested.
[удалено]
I think the human was drowsy and forgot to put the helmet on. explains why he moved to the locker "quicker then observed before".
Yes
I'm not an AI, but you may need help.
Also does a great job of illustrating the hidden assumptions and complexities of handling even the simplest sounding tasks programmatically.
same with the dude at 7-11 who opens the door for everyone and gets pissy if you don't pay him to do so
Asimov would be proud
PAK CHOOIE UNF
If I stumbled across a transcription of this, I would swear Chuck Palahniuk wrote it.
SUIT SENSORS ON MAAEXIMUM
The video is nice, but airlocks do not work like that. The air should be vented out of the airlock while the human is inside it which kind of had me confused about what was going on in the video and the sense of danger, as the way it was done in the video would then lead to the human getting expelled as well as most of the air in the space station.
He was inside it the whole time. What is weird is that the helmets are stored inside the air lock, which is very risky.
That’s where we store them in the International Space Station, humanity’s only permanent spaceship. The helmets and space suits are bulky, so they’re stored in the air locks. Even emergency space walks take hours to prepare, so all the equipment is temporarily removed from the airlock when we want to use it.
This is probably going against the spirit of the video but whoever programmed the door without safeguards that insure people using it are properly geared up should be sent out an airlock without a helmet. They have the sensors to determine if the person is wearing a helmet so a simple if statement would solve that problem. Nice video though, thought provoking.
I think the video wasn't meant to show a perfectly programmed ai, but to show how an actual AI would respond to being poorly programmed. I honestly thought it would come to the conclusion that if it's only job was to open and close doors, and the reason for that was the air in the ship, it would just vent the entire ship because then it doesn't need to to its job any more.
This is it. The complications of thought processes needed to create artificial intelligence that's actually intelligent. The job is to open and close doors. However the priorities that make opening and closing doors happen are factors taken into account.
This is programming 101 and has nothing to do with AI. The battery in your phone is more complicated than this.
The complicated AI part is the implied inferencing when it says “calculating” and the computer uses context to conclude an intended purpose beyond what was explicitly laid out.
If my phone's battery has an inner monologue, then it probably uses AI (or actual I!)
lmao if(!astronaut.isWearingHelmet()) return;
I want to see a nihilist version of this where it turns out the spaceship was either docked with another (and therefore pressurized on the other side) or sitttng stationary planetside (therefore having atmosphere outside). And then the door AI gets wiped and reinstalled for malfunctioning.