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The Profoundly Weird, Gender-Specific Roots of the Turing Test

malachiorion writes: Alan Turing never wrote about the Turing Test, that legendary measure of machine intelligence that researchers claimed to have passed last weekend. He proposed something much stranger — a contest between men and machines, to see who was better at pretending to be a woman. The details of the Imitation Game aren't secret, or even hard to find, and yet no one seems to reference it. This article explains why they should — in part because it's so odd, but also because it might be a better test for 'machines that think' than the chatbot-infested, seemingly useless Turing Test.

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  1. I Think That Alan Turing Himself by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    May have been an expert at pretending to be a woman.

    Of course, not in the league of J. Edgar Hoover...

    --
    "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
    Never been known to fail..."