Tag Archives: factslaps

Monkey See, Monkey Do Not Compute

 

I’ve been increasingly reading about the pending perils of Artificial Intelligence.

Even some of my IQ heroes — Richard Dawkins, Lawrence Krauss, Sam Harris — appear to be Chicken Littling the shit out of the dangers of sentient machines that will soon make autonomous decisions that could threaten our very existence. Harris and Krauss seem particularly fond of the Paper Clip Analogy: If we use A.I. to most effectively produce, say, paper clips, what will stop A. I. from seeing anything extraneous to that process (including us) as a waste of productivity easily solved by erasure.

To Richie, Larry and Sammy and their ilk, I humbly submit these observations:

Artificial Intelligence is a misnomer. Intelligence cannot be artificial, no more than colors or flavors can be. Nor, for that matter, cars, hydrogen bombs, Furbys Image result for furbiesand, yes, paper clips. Elements may combine in a way they never would have if left unadulterated, but the taproot source — from flesh and brains to chemical, metal, wood and plastic alloys — were all borne of the Big Bang and the chaos that followed. Unless you’re arguing that god is artificial (future column), then anything ever produced is natural. Even robots.

A.I. isn’t as close as people fear. 60 Minutes did a wonderful story on A.I. (can we change “Artificial” to “Accentuated?”) after IBM’s Watson computer shellacked human competitors on Jeopardy! That was followed by innumerable articles about the pending risks of A.I. overlords.

But how pending is it? It’s not as if Watson recognized the win and celebrated its victory with a finger wag and a “Suck it, fleshbags!” taunt.

A.I. posits that computers will soon develop self-awareness — consciousness. Yet we know less about our own consciousness than we do our own cosmos. When is a child self-aware? When does a human being become sentient? While we have made undeniable progress in understanding our own neural networks, a human  brain has more than 100 trillion synapses, dwarfing the number of stars in any galaxy in the universe. I’ve yet to see reports of us being on the brink of connecting those dots into something nearing sentience. If we’re not clearing the first hurdle, how do we even recognize the second?

The assumption that A.I. will turn on us is a specious leap. Let’s retrofit this argument: If we discovered humans were created by a simpler cognitive force (say, a brilliant chimp), would we hack that chimp to death for being the intellectual lesser? Or would we be grateful George was curious? Image result for curious georgeMercy and malevolence remain just as baffling since we crawled from the ooze.

Oh, and a final thought: Name a notoriously villainous computer (think Hal 9000, Terminator, Matrix drones). Could they be worse than the human iteration we’re haunted by currently?

And now, for some Natural Intelligence, Factslaps:

  • Riding a roller coaster can help patients to expel their kidney stones.Image result for roller coaster kidney stones
  • The use of CAPITAL LETTERS TO DENOTE SHOUTING dates back to the 19th century.
  • One contender for the geographical center of the U.S. is a place called Center. Related image
  • ‘Bumpsy’ is 17th Century slang for drunk.
  • Giant flying turkeys as big as kangaroos once roamed Australia. Image result for giant flying turkeys australia
  • The US Embassy in Kathmandu has guidelines on what to do if a yeti is found.Image result for yeti
  • Life expectancy for Arabs in Israel is the highest in the Arab-Muslim world, at 79 years.
  • A lychnobite is someone who sleeps all day and works all night.Image result for lychnobite
  • Hawaiian Airlines never had a fatal accident or a hull loss throughout its 88 year history, the oldest in the U.S.
  • While apes can learn sign language and communicate using it, they have never attempted to learn new knowledge by asking questions to humans or other apes.Image result for sign language apes
  • The second officer of the Titanic, who survived by swimming from the sinking ship to a capsized raft, later in life sailed his civilian craft to Dunkirk and helped evacuate over 130 men.Image result for The second officer of the Titanic, who survived by swimming from the sinking ship to a capsized raft, later in life sailed his civilian craft to Dunkirk
  • “Swatting” happens when someone makes a call to a police department with a false story of an ongoing crime –often with killing or hostages involved– in an attempt to draw a large number of police officers to a particular address.Image result for "Swatting" happens when someone makes a call to a police department with a false story of an ongoing crime
  • In 2017, a Texas wedding photographer was awarded a $1 million defamation verdict against a married couple whom the jury found posted false statements in a social media campaign after being unhappy about a surprise $125 fee.
  • Beethoven managed to keep working even after he completely lost his hearing by the time he was 45. By clenching a stick in his teeth, holding it against the keyboard of his piano, he could discern faint sounds.Image result for beethoven stick between teeth
  • Ghanaian soccer player Mohammed Anas accidentally thanked both his wife and his girlfriend in a speech after a match.Image result for Mohammed Anas accidentally thanked both his wife and his girlfriend in a speech after a match.

Is It Too Late for a Midterm Candidate?

 

The problem with a 24-hour news cycle is that no minute matters. Unless you look.

And this interview is worth a minute. Maybe two. Because it’s around 1:50 into the video that she drops a matter-of-fact bombshell. Nothing CNN could have anticipated, or they would have paraded her identity politics front and center.

And from there on, she schools us all. Her account of the accused bomber is as even-handed as Ken Burns. Her grasp of differences — and how to manage them — should be required viewing for anyone in public service. Perhaps anyone in public.

Here’s to Debra Gureghian, and an official endorsement for her election to any office, in any state, for any party.

And now for other higher truths, Factslaps:

  • Pope Francis, Nelson Mandela and Henry Kissinger are honorary members of the Harlem Globetrotters. Image result for pope francis harlem globetrotters
  • We use the word “Cancer” as a medical diagnosis because Hippocrates thought the tumors looked like crabs.
  • Pole dancing started in 1135 AD and was mostly done by men. Image result for ancient greek men dancing
  • North Korea accidentally hit one of its own cities during a failed missile test in 2017.
  • At 93 years old, George H. W. Bush became the longest living President in U.S. history.Image result for h.w. bush
  • A man once tattooed “Netflix” on his body and after tweeting a picture to the company he received a free year of service.Image result for netflix tattoo
  • Women have larger pupils than men.Image result for female pupils eye

Believe It Or Not!

 

I took my nephew to Hollywood for the first time. You know, for the ambiance and understated charm.

We went to Mann’s Chinese Theater, where he stepped in Donald Duck’s footsteps. Then we went to Ripley’s Believe It Or Not! Museum, where we found another daffy Donald.

It was a Madame Taussaud  wax sculpture of Trump. Til I die I’ll believe that the initial rendering was the most sublime “fuck you” to a president ever created.Rafi gazed for a few minutes at the terrific floating faucet (why have they not marketed this into an overpriced magic trick?)

Then he wandered to the sculpture. “Do you know who this is is?” I asked. “Yep,” Rafi said with the confidence of an 8-year-old about to show an old man how out of touch he was. “That’s the president. He doesn’t like us.”

My mind raced, then reeled. How did he come to that conclusion? Grown-ups? The TV? Friends? Viral videos? And what do you tell a child who suspects something like that? The truth?

So I did what most parents likely do. I walked him back to the faucet. “Isn’t that cool? How do you think they do that”

We walked out, me dizzied by either the offhandedness of the comment, the heat, or both. We were met by a group of marchers, carrying hand-painted signs and shouting in Spanish. and bullhorns. I do not know what they were saying, but had a hunch. Police escorted them across the red light, a phalanx of signage, singing, searing. When they passed and the light allowed, we began to cross. By now, I’m literally afraid to let go his shoulder.

Without looking up, he says “What does ‘protest’ mean?” My clutch melted into a mini massage-squeeze, mini back scratch. Then just a hand on a shoulder.

It means we’re going home, kid, where truths can be discoveries, not realizations. To Rafi, the week’s Factslaps

  • Your mobile phone has more computing power than the computers used for the Apollo 11 moon landing.Image result for apollo 11
  • The winner of the first modern Olympic Marathon stopped at a tavern mid-race for a glass of wine.
  • People buy more when they’re hungry, even when shopping for non-edible goods.Image result for food court
  • Despite being a relatively small and densely populated country, The Netherlands is the world’s second biggest exporter of food.Image result for finland on map
  • The original Pac-Man has a safe spot where the ghosts will never get you.Related image
  • Ancient Romans running for office wore a distinctive toga called the “toga candida.” Hence the word “candidate.”
  • Leonardo DiCaprio’s haircut from Titanic was once outlawed by the Taliban.Image result for leonardo dicaprio titanic

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b4K5od-uZEY