Since AI in the form of chatbots has finally emerged to widespread human consciousness, it’s a good time to revisit the 2014 film called “The Imitation Game,” based on the life of English mathematician and cryptologist Alan Turing.
Turing is widely considered the father of theoretical computer science and artificial intelligence.
The film is an entertaining and mostly accurate interpretation of his life during World War II, when he worked for the British government to crack German codes.
It is also a highly relevant reminder of the terrible toll homophobia has taken on so many lives, including Turing’s, at a time certain politicians attempt to role back the advances we have made toward fair and equal treatment of all people regardless of gender or sexual preference.
After his wartime service, Turing was convicted of “gross indecency” (i.e., homosexuality) and sentenced to chemical castration, which led to his death, probably by suicide but perhaps by accident, in 1954 at the age of 41.
In 2013, Queen Elizabeth II granted Turing a posthumous Royal Pardon, honoring his work leading to the creation of the modern computer.
LINKS:
Biden administration lawyer may have saved student loan forgiveness plan at Supreme Court (CNBC)
FBI chief Christopher Wray says China lab leak most likely (BBC)
What does the science say about the origin of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic? (NPR)
GOP divided on how to respond to ‘lab leak’ report (Politico)
We’ve Been Talking About the Lab-Leak Hypothesis All Wrong (NYT)
The Reason the Recession Hasn’t Happened Yet (Atlantic)
Chicago voters end mayor Lori Lightfoot's bid for reelection (USA Today)
Generative AI is sowing the seeds of doubt in serious science (Financial Times)
Robots let ChatGPT touch the real world thanks to Microsoft (Ars Technica)
Bing chatbot just got smarter – and it’s about to get different AI personalities (TechRadar)
What is consciousness? ChatGPT and advanced AI might redefine our answer (NBC)
COVID-19 conspiracies soar after latest report on origins (AP)
Eli Lilly to Cut Prices of Insulin Drugs by 70%, Cap Patient Costs at $35 (WSJ)
U.S. House panel approves bill giving Biden power to ban TikTok (Reuters)
Giving Tucker Carlson Jan. 6 video violates the First Amendment (Baltimore Sun)
‘Havana syndrome’ not caused by energy weapon or foreign adversary, intelligence review finds (WP)
How U.S., Afghan governments failed to adequately train Afghan security forces after spending $90 billion over 20 years (CBS)
Afghanistan watchdog ‘not super optimistic’ that US will learn its lessons from Afghanistan to help Ukraine (CNN)
700,000 people lost their jobs since regime change in Afghanistan: UN envoy (The Print)
Scrounging for Tanks for Ukraine, Europe’s Armies Come Up Short (NYT)
China’s collapsing birth and marriage rates reflect a people’s deep pessimism (WP)
Snow shuts down Yosemite National Park indefinitely (CBS)
Executive On Hot Streak With 2 Straight Logical Decisions (The Onion)
No comments:
Post a Comment