The Turing test for machine intelligence was first proposed over 75 years ago, but it has never been so timely as it is right now. In John Busser’s “All to HumAIn”, two researchers place three volunteers in a room with the task of determining through there interactions which of them is human and which is a machine simulation. As the experiment progresses, all three see their “humanity” break down as the scenario devolves into to one no unlike Sartre’s No Exit. A tense and provocative piece with an ending that truly surprises.
The Turing test for machine intelligence was first proposed over 75 years ago, but it has never been so timely as it is right now. In John Busser’s “All to HumAIn”, two researchers place three volunteers in a room with the task of determining through there interactions which of them is human and which is a machine simulation. As the experiment progresses, all three see their “humanity” break down as the scenario devolves into to one no unlike Sartre’s No Exit. A tense and provocative piece with an ending that truly surprises.