Tim C Koppang wrote:Mike Novack wrote:Tim, are you saying that a go playing computer program would fail the "Turing Test"?
Interesting question. However, I think limiting the test to a server that does not allow for chat is a bit like cheating. I generally don't play games where I have no chat option. Maybe that says something about my personality, and what I'm looking for in games. Nonetheless, I'll try to answer in the spirit in which the question was asked...
Well ...... let's say that "chatting" was allowed. The current state of the art (actually going back decades in this regard) is that an AI program might be able to fake passing the Turing Test in chatting provided the realm of discourse (what you are chatting about) were limited. By "fake" I mean a sort of cheating where the program uses tricks to get out of situations where it can't figure out what you "said" (typed). Ranges from "Doctor" asking about your mother, "Parry" getting aggressive, etc. Here I think some set of "let's concentrate on the game", "let's stick to talking about go", etc. might do the trick to fool a human.
But more to the point, I think you missed the final part of what I was saying. Yes I understand, based upon what you "found out" later your feelings about the game, the value of the game, etc. would change. However note that this was the result only of your belief, not about any reality << I did include the possibility that you might have been misinformed >>
Yes, told that it was a team that beat you you feel "cheated". But that's not because it was a team against you but because you were told a team against you and you believed that.