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Opinion: Rather than focus on the speculative rights of sentient AI, we need to address human rights

A Google engineer鈥檚 claims that a chatbot can feel things has prompted people to consider what consciousness means. It also begs the questions of the rights of sentient software and machines.
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We must also be mindful that our human tendency to anthropomorphize can be easy exploited by designers.

A flurry of activity occurred on social media after Blake Lemoine a Google developer, was placed on leave for claiming that LaMDA, a chatbot, had become sentient — in other words, had acquired the ability to experience feelings. In support of his claim, Lemoine from an exchange with LaMDA, which responded to queries by saying, “

It might seem like a trivial exchange and hardly worth the claim of sentience, even if it appears more realistic than . Even Lemoine’s evidence of the exchange was . Nevertheless, the dynamic and fluid nature of the conversation is impressive.

Before we start creating a bill of rights for artificial intelligence, we need to think about how human experiences and biases can affect our trust in artificial intelligence (AI).

Producing the artificial

In popular science, AI has become a , . Artificiality emphasizes the non-biological nature of these systems and the abstract nature of code, as well as nonhuman pathways of learning, decision-making and behaviour.

By focusing on artificiality, the obvious facts that AIs are created by humans and make or assist in decisions for humans can be overlooked. The outcomes of these decisions can have a consequential impact on humans such as , or .

Chatbots — good ones — are designed to simulate social interactions of humans. Chatbots have become an all-too-familiar feature of online customer service. If a customer only needs a predictable response, they would likely not know that they were interacting with an AI.

Functions of complexity

The difference between simple customer-service chatbots and more sophisticated types like LaMDA is a function of complexity in both the dataset used to train the AI and the rules that govern the exchange.

Intelligence reflects — there are . Domain-specific intelligence includes tasks like riding bikes, performing surgery, naming birds or playing chess. Domain-general intelligence includes general skills like creativity, reasoning and problem-solving.

Programmers have come a long way in designing AIs that can demonstrate domain-specific intelligence in activities ranging from : if we can determine the rules that govern human thinking, we can then teach AI those rules.

General intelligence — what many see as quintessentially human — is a far more complicated faculty. In humans, it is likely reliant on the . provide especially useful tools, giving humans the ability to remember and combine information across domains.

Thus, while developers have frequently been .

Mind the AI

Claims that an AI might be sentient present challenges beyond that of general intelligence. Philosophers have long pointed out that we have difficulty in understanding others’ , let alone understanding what constitutes consciousness in .

To understand claims of sentience, we have to look to how humans judge others. We frequently , often assuming that . Psychologists have observed that children must learn about the mental states of others and that having or being embedded in more can improve their ability to understand others.

When judging the intelligence of an AI, it is more likely that humans are anthropomorphizing than AIs are in fact sentient. Much of this has to do with — by increasing our exposure to objects or people, .

The claims of sentience made by those like Lemoine should be interpreted in this light.

Can we trust AI?

The can be used to determine whether a machine can think in a manner indistinguishable from a person. While LaMDA responses are certainly are human-like, this implies that it is better at learning patterns. Sentience isn’t required.

Simply because someone trusts a chatbot does not mean that trust is warranted. Rather than focusing on the highly speculative nature of AI sentience, we must instead focus our efforts to deal with social and ethical issues that affect humans.

We face and .

. requires that individuals, governments and the private sector work together to understand — and regulate — artificial intelligence and its application.

We must also be mindful that can be easy . Alternatively, we might that fail to pass as human. In our age of , we must be critical in who and what we trust.

The Conversation

Jordan Richard Schoenherr does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

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