What’s The Difference Between Artificial Intelligence In Film and its Limitations in Real Life? | HackerNoon

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What’s The Difference Between Artificial Intelligence In Film and its Limitations in Real Life? | HackerNoon
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Artificial Intelligence gets a bad reputation because of Hollywood summer blockbusters. - artificialintelligence ai

Artificial Intelligence is one of the most misunderstood technological innovations to ever be presented to the general public. Movies like The Terminator represent AI as monstrous killing machines that take pleasure in wiping out all of humanity because it’s the “logical” thing to do. Star Trek Nemesis represents the Borg as a sentient species of AI that hijacks the human body and bends its victims to its will.

That type of depiction of AI couldn’t be further from the truth in terms of the way that modern AI development is currently progressing.Artificial Intelligence is able to mimic humans closely in many cases, for instance chat bots such asor Cactus AI are able to reply to questions or prompts in such a way that they’re nearly indistinguishable from human writing. However, AI is still extremely limited in terms of its capability.

Exposing an AI to a set of information is called training, because researchers are training that AI to perform a specific function depending on what types of information it’s exposed to. A common misconception about AI is that they have access to all information at all times, and therefore can do something like hack into the Department of Defense in an attempt to steal the nuclear launch codes, and start firing off missiles to turn the Earth into a wasteland like audiences saw in The Terminator.

Transportation even benefits from artificial intelligence because self-driving vehicles such as Tesla cars are now on the road. The AI built into Tesla’s vehicles drives in a much safer capacity than humans do in many cases because the AI knows, remembers, and acts upon all rules of the road, speed limits, and takes into account the other drivers on the road in ways humans in many cases don’t.

AI programmers understand this very well, so instead of giving an AI access to broad databases of data, programmers restrict the AIs they’re working on to specific sets of data. In some cases even going so far as to place them inside devices known asthat are essentially rooms that have electromagnetic shielding so that no signals or frequencies can enter, or leave the room.

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