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"St Lawrence of Google"

mcho writes "The Economist has a story about Google's co-founder, Larry Page, who " always wanted to change the world". The article attempts to make an arguement about the company's true intentions, amid all the rumors about potential Google products. "Google is already working on a massive and global computing grid. Eventually, says Mr Saffo, 'they're trying to build the machine that will pass the Turing test' -- in other words, an artificial intelligence that can pass as a human in written conversations. Wisely or not, Google wants to be a new sort of deus ex machina.""

5 of 392 comments (clear)

  1. George Harrison by OakDragon · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    I know how much you guys like **Beatles Beatles From TFA:

    George Harrison was "the quiet Beatle". But it was Harrison who first made his mark after the Beatles disbanded by scoring a No. 1 hit single with "My Sweet Lord," in 1970 (the success of the single was somewhat marred by a 1976 court ruling that found Harrison guilty of "subconscious plagiarism" of The Chiffons' charming ditty "He's So Fine"). Even if his self-deprecating and retiring personality made it hard for him to be heard above his charismatic bandmates, few will deny that Harrison - as a guitarist and as a songwriter - was an important voice for the Beatles.

    more...

  2. Re:It's just a search engine! by Dachannien · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    If you look at Microsoft and the Gates Foundation, they have done more to help the world by investing billions into 3rd world nations and convincing others to do the same.

    So remember, don't pirate Windows and don't use Linux instead. Please, won't you think of the children?

  3. Re:T1,2,3 by drDugan · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    As long people continue to propigate the concept of property, we will continue to have inter-human competition for resources. Hardware based tools, (computer agents, systems, etc.) will be placed into use to aggregate resources and yes, someone will build skynet.

    One solution is to deeply investigate the possible worlds where humans, in a global, conscious choice decide to eliminate the concept of property. (NB: extreme changes in all human society would be associated with this.) I've done some research on this and I'm currently writing a book on what kind of worlds will be possible (post-singularity ) in relation to human assumptions on property. The concepts are not new, but the ability to implement them are new based on persistent global communication.

  4. Re:Don't mess with the missionary man by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Offtopic
    Not only did I name the wrong decade...

    ...but you can't keep your advertisement out of your comment, where it doesn't belong.