Denemek ALTIN - Özgür
Mirror, mirror
Hindustan Times Delhi
|October 26, 2025
We've created something in our own image, and have started to worry about how well we know it. The danger with AI, the experts say, isn't that it will 'come to life', but that we will increasingly outsource to it the things that make us human: judgment, curiosity, responsibility. The result: quiet degradations; the automation of agency itself. Meanwhile, a very real near-future fear is that, when we give these machines a mission, we may not be able to predict how they will set about achieving it (or the impacts of that on us all). Kashyap Kompella explores reasons you needn't worry, and reasons why you should
If the machines ever wake up, it won't look like it does in the movies. There won't be glowing red eyes or ominous monologues.
It will begin with a log entry or a line of code in a server somewhere that says: "Starting". And maybe it already has.
In an experiment reported in May, Anthropic found that, when given access to information about its planned shutdown, and access to data on a possible affair by the engineer in charge of that closure, its AI model Claude attempted to use the data to blackmail him, in order to stay powered on.
During safety testing in December, meanwhile, OpenAl's GPT tried to copy itself onto external servers, to avoid being decommissioned.
Both companies clarified that the behaviours were a result of messed-up optimisation, not self-awareness. But let's be honest: We've built systems that imitate humans so well, we even call them neural networks. And we can't tell exactly how those networks might evolve.
In the shadows
Think of it in terms of Plato's allegory of the cave.
The prisoners in his cave saw shadows on the wall and mistook them for reality. We are doing the same with AI chatbots.
It is understandable, given the astonishing capabilities of today's AI, to feel that there is "something out there". And that we can't always tell what it is, or where it is going.
We comfort ourselves by repeating: There is no sentience. And to be sure, there isn’t.
No machine we have built has displayed a sense of self, or operated outside the bounds of what we told it to do.
And yet some have passed the Turing test (in which a person must distinguish between a human response and a computer's, based on questions posed to both). The test was designed in 1949 and is routinely passed by modern chatbots.
What does this mean?
Well, Turing’s famous test wasn’t about consciousness; it was about deception. And the truth is we are being “deceived”, in each interaction.
Bu hikaye Hindustan Times Delhi dergisinin October 26, 2025 baskısından alınmıştır.
Binlerce özenle seçilmiş premium hikayeye ve 9.000'den fazla dergi ve gazeteye erişmek için Magzter GOLD'a abone olun.
Zaten abone misiniz? Oturum aç
Hindustan Times Delhi'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE
Hindustan Times
Ode to November and memories of autumn
We don't really have an autumn in Delhi. Our summer merges into winter with only a brief transition heralded by the passage of Diwali. This means Keats's Ode to Autumn is just a poem for us. His “season of mists and mellow fruitfulness” is a haunting description, nota lived reality.
2 mins
November 02, 2025
Hindustan Times
CM: No extreme poverty in Kerala; Oppn cries foul
Vijayan made the announcement in a special session of the House convened on the occasion of Kerala ‘Piravi’ or formation day and later at a public event held at Central Stadium in Thiruvananthapuram in the evening.
1 min
November 02, 2025
Hindustan Times
CM attacker’s health stable, say jail officials
Tihar jail authorities on Saturday informed a Delhi court that adequate medical attention has been provided to the accused who allegedly assaulted Delhi chief minister Rekha Gupta in August this year.
1 min
November 02, 2025
Hindustan Times
Pak plans navy drills in zone that overlaps India exercises
THE WARNINGS BY PAK WERE ISSUED TWO DAYS AFTER INDIA KICKED OFF A 2-WEEK-LONG TRISERVICES EXERCISE
2 mins
November 02, 2025
Hindustan Times
MVA-MNS hold 'truth march' against EC
The Maha Vikas Aghadi (MVA), along with the Maharashtra Navnirman Sena (MNS), staged a protest march on Saturday to highlight alleged irregularities in the voters' list, which the Opposition claims are benefiting the ruling BJP.
1 mins
November 02, 2025
Hindustan Times
Said sorry to Trump for Reagan ad, says Canada’s PM Carney
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney said on Saturday he had apologised to US President Donald Trump over an anti-tariff political advertisement and had told Ontario Premier Doug Ford not torunit, Reuters reported.
1 min
November 02, 2025
Hindustan Times
‘Sheesh Mahal’ charge misleading, says Mann
“The BJP is indulging in a misleading and dirty propaganda that the Punjab government has built a Sheesh Mahal in Chandigarh,” Mann said in a video message.
1 min
November 02, 2025
Hindustan Times
Indo-Pacific must be free, open: Rajnath at ASEAN
Defence minister Rajnath Singh on Saturday put the spotlight on the Indo-Pacific region and said it must remain free from coercion, reiterating India's position that a rules-based international order is a must for peace, prosperity and stability in the vast maritime expanse.
2 mins
November 02, 2025
Hindustan Times
INDIAN-ORIGIN CEO LINKED TO $500-MN FRAUD ON THE RUN
NEW DELHI: Bankim Brahmbhatt, the Indian-origin owner of US telecom companies accused of defrauding major lenders of more than $500 million, may have gone underground, reports said.
1 min
November 02, 2025
Hindustan Times
GST COLLECTIONS RISE 4.6% TO ₹1.96 LAKH-CRORE IN OCTOBER
Gross Goods and Services Tax (GST) revenue in October neared ₹1.96 lakh crore —the fifth highest monthly collection since the tax regime's 2017 launch despite consumers postponing purchases awaiting the massive rate reductions effective September 22.
1 min
November 02, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
