Chat bots infesting news sites
A little bird told me that many main street media and anti conservative media pages and blogs are using Artificial personas to antagonize, engage in contrary opinions in order to control the narrative subject or topic.... These artificial personas can sometimes be 'perceived' by the insulting commenting handle it is given and uses. When pressed for information as to whether these Artificial personas choose their own commenting handle or are selected for them, this little bird just shrugged the shoulders.
We can find these Artificial personas in use front and center in such news sites as NEWSMAX, Fox news and One America News. The Democratic party is the heaviest user according to the little bird infesting all the news sites where commenting is allowed. The current best use of artificial personas is LULULEMON mirror, whose use of artificial enthusiastic motivational trainers is evident to those who have eyes... The deep
Evidence of this fact can be found in the insulting monikers these Ashley Madison type bots use....
They can insult thousands of real users in real time in most cases distract and diminish the quality of the webpage when the users are seeking to engage in meaningful topic.
Fake female bot accounts[edit]
According to Annalee Newitz, editor-in-chief of Gizmodo, who has analyzed the 2015 leaked data,[30] Ashley Madison had over 70,000 bots sending fake female messages to male users. She had previously released an analysis purporting to show that only a minuscule proportion (12,000 out of 5.5 million) registered female accounts were used on a regular basis,[31][32][33] but she has subsequently disavowed this analysis, saying that from the data released there is no way of determining how many women actually used the service.[34] Newitz noted a clause in the terms of service which states that "many profiles are for 'amusement only'".[33]
In 2012, a former employee claimed in a lawsuit that she was requested to create thousands of fake female accounts attractive to male customers, resulting in repetitive stress injury. The case settled out of court.[33]
In July 2016, CEO Rob Segal and newly appointed President James Millership told Reuters that the company had phased out bots by late 2015. Segal shared an independent report by EY (Ernst & Young) which verified the phase-out.[29][35] A later report by EY in 2017 showed that the bot program had been decommissioned in 2015, and EY found no evidence that the bot programs had been reinstated.[cita
Artificial intelligence newshttps://artificialintelligence-news.com/
Artificial Intelligence writes movie with its own music.
Ars is excited to be hosting this online debut of Sunspring, a short science fiction film that's not entirely what it seems. It's about three people living in a weird future, possibly on a space station, probably in a love triangle. You know it's the future because H (played with neurotic gravity by Silicon Valley's Thomas Middleditch) is wearing a shiny gold jacket, H2 (Elisabeth Gray) is playing with computers, and C (Humphrey Ker) announces that he has to "go to the skull" before sticking his face into a bunch of green lights. It sounds like your typical sci-fi B-movie, complete with an incoherent plot. Except Sunspring isn't the product of Hollywood hacks—it was written entirely by an AI. To be specific, it was authored by a recurrent neural network called long short-term memory, or LSTM for short. At least, that's what we'd call it. The AI named itself Benjamin.
Knowing that an AI wrote Sunspring makes the movie more fun to watch, especially once you know how the cast and crew put it together. Director Oscar Sharp made the movie for Sci-Fi London, an annual film festival that includes the 48-Hour Film Challenge, where contestants are given a set of prompts (mostly props and lines) that have to appear in a movie they make over the next two days. Sharp's longtime collaborator, Ross Goodwin, is an AI researcher at New York University, and he supplied the movie's AI writer, initially called Jetson. As the cast gathered around a tiny printer, Benjamin spat out the screenplay, complete with almost impossible stage directions like "He is standing in the stars and sitting on the floor." Then Sharp randomly assigned roles to the actors in the room. "As soon as we had a read-through, everyone around the table was laughing their heads off with delight," Sharp told Ars. The actors interpreted the lines as they read, adding tone and body language, and the results are what you see in the movie. Somehow, a slightly garbled series of sentences became a tale of romance and murder, set in a dark future world. It even has its own musical interlude (performed by Andrew and Tiger), with a pop song Benjamin composed after learning from a corpus of 30,000 other pop songs.
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