Bots Have Taken Over Nearly Half the Internet, but Almost a 3rd of Users Can't Tell Difference |
Bots Have Taken Over Nearly Half the Internet, but Almost a 3rd of Users Can't Tell Difference |
coothead |
Aug 11 2023, 04:04 PM
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#21
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Advanced Member Group: Members Posts: 231 Joined: 12-January 23 From: chertsey, a small town 25 miles south west of london, england Member No.: 28,743 |
. I enjoy taking online opinion surveys..... . then they reject you (and you don't get the reward for completing the survey). . I also do surveys..... . I get kicked off even if my answers line up. I also do surveys and bots may well be involved but I strongly believe that the real reason for rejection is AGEiSM. So how old are you? - ( There is no obligation, of course, to answer this publicly ) I am in my final year as a septuagenarian and have experienced a massive drop in the surveys offered to me and those that are offered are more often than not immediately terminated when the magic numbers 79 and 1944 are entered. Of course, I have to admit that living alone without children, motor vehicles or anything that is called "Smart" might also have adverse effects. On the other hand, surveys that intentionly ignore these responses are just creating biased irrevelant surveys. coothead |
Darin McGrew |
Aug 11 2023, 04:05 PM
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#22
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WDG Member Group: Root Admin Posts: 8,366 Joined: 4-August 06 From: Mountain View, CA Member No.: 3 |
Do you think those repeat questions are used to catch bots? I have no idea, but ISTR such repeat questions have been around a very long time. I imagine police interrogators would use them to spot lies. But I also read recently that current "AI" bots can be very incoherent in their answers, so if you ask their age you might get wildly different answers every time. I think the repeat questions are intended to weed out people who just fill out as many surveys as possible to collect the rewards, without really paying attention to the questions. If it catches stupid bots, then that's just a bonus. The real goal is to catch people who aren't really answering seriously. |
Darin McGrew |
Aug 11 2023, 04:12 PM
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#23
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WDG Member Group: Root Admin Posts: 8,366 Joined: 4-August 06 From: Mountain View, CA Member No.: 3 |
QUOTE On the other hand, surveys that intentionly ignore these responses are just creating biased irrevelant surveys. I think it depends on what they're trying to figure out. If they want to know more about people who play video games, then it doesn't make sense to continue once you say that you never play video games. But if they're trying to figure out general attitudes towards smart home technology, then yeah, they should include people who don't use it, or who use it just a little. In that case, limiting their study to people who already have lots of smart home devices would be short sighted. |
pandy |
Aug 11 2023, 05:44 PM
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#24
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🌟Computer says no🌟 Group: WDG Moderators Posts: 20,763 Joined: 9-August 06 Member No.: 6 |
I've used a lot of survey sites and I know only one that feels professional and actually pay a decent hourly wage (specified). It's clearly stated who the client is, most often a university institution, you can contact the researcher and so on. The surveys can also be more taxing, but aren't always. But after spending an hour on a psych test where you stare at fast switching images with colored dots, you actually need a break!
But otherwise, I'm mostly surprised that companies actually pay for surveys that are so bad as they often are. |
pandy |
Aug 13 2023, 04:14 AM
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#25
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🌟Computer says no🌟 Group: WDG Moderators Posts: 20,763 Joined: 9-August 06 Member No.: 6 |
Read an article yesterday saying that AI generated child pornography increases rapidly. On top of the obvious problems with that they often use images of children from already existing real porn as a starting point. So already abused children get virtually abused again. And the police and other organizations that fight child porn need to sift through it all and try to decide what's real and what's not, which they said isn't easy to judge, so it slows them down significantly.
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pandy |
Aug 19 2023, 12:31 PM
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#26
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🌟Computer says no🌟 Group: WDG Moderators Posts: 20,763 Joined: 9-August 06 Member No.: 6 |
Only for Christian - unless you understand Swedish. Sorry for that.
https://sverigesradio.se/avsnitt/max-tegmar...marpratare-2023 Sommar (Summer) is a long running radio show that lets known and not so known people talk about what they want for an hour and a half. Max Tegmark is a renown scientist with an interest for AI. I haven't listened to the end of the show yet, but it seems he thinks AI will be the end of us. Maybe a grain of salt is needed, but interesting anyway. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Max_Tegmark |
Christian J |
Aug 19 2023, 02:03 PM
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#27
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. Group: WDG Moderators Posts: 9,739 Joined: 10-August 06 Member No.: 7 |
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coothead |
Aug 19 2023, 03:30 PM
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#28
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Advanced Member Group: Members Posts: 231 Joined: 12-January 23 From: chertsey, a small town 25 miles south west of london, england Member No.: 28,743 |
coothead |
pandy |
Aug 19 2023, 07:38 PM
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#29
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🌟Computer says no🌟 Group: WDG Moderators Posts: 20,763 Joined: 9-August 06 Member No.: 6 |
Great! I'll watch it. In installments.
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pandy |
Aug 19 2023, 07:40 PM
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#30
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🌟Computer says no🌟 Group: WDG Moderators Posts: 20,763 Joined: 9-August 06 Member No.: 6 |
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pandy |
Aug 20 2023, 08:44 AM
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#31
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🌟Computer says no🌟 Group: WDG Moderators Posts: 20,763 Joined: 9-August 06 Member No.: 6 |
He told an anecdote that I found interesting.
An AI asked humans for help to read a CAPTCHA. I didn't expect it would. I guess at a forum or a group chat of some kind. The person it spoke to was on to it and asked if it was bot. Then the AI lied and said it was a visually impaired person. I didn't expect that either. But Tegmark didn't say what AI. So it could be something experimental that was programmed to do exactly that. Anyhow, it kind of shows the potential. I think Tegmark and the numerous other scientists that raise a warning flag now are right. In the wrong hands AI could be lethal. But I don't see how we can stop it from ending up in the wrong hands. Treaties between countries are of little use when it comes to traditional war, so it hardly will work in this case. And there are always private enterprise and omnipotent individuals. |
coothead |
Aug 20 2023, 10:15 AM
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#32
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Advanced Member Group: Members Posts: 231 Joined: 12-January 23 From: chertsey, a small town 25 miles south west of london, england Member No.: 28,743 |
. I think Tegmark and the numerous other scientists that raise a . warning flag now are right. In the wrong hands AI could be lethal.
coothead |
Christian J |
Aug 20 2023, 02:00 PM
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#33
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. Group: WDG Moderators Posts: 9,739 Joined: 10-August 06 Member No.: 7 |
He told an anecdote that I found interesting. An AI asked humans for help to read a CAPTCHA. I didn't expect it would. I guess at a forum or a group chat of some kind. The person it spoke to was on to it and asked if it was bot. Then the AI lied and said it was a visually impaired person. I didn't expect that either. But Tegmark didn't say what AI. So it could be something experimental that was programmed to do exactly that. Anyhow, it kind of shows the potential. I think Tegmark and the numerous other scientists that raise a warning flag now are right. In the wrong hands AI could be lethal. Doesn't sound too bad, unless/until an AI becomes better at social engineering than even human online scammers. I don't think AI:s need help with CAPTCHAs anymore though: https://forums.htmlhelp.com/index.php?showtopic=61360 QUOTE But I don't see how we can stop it from ending up in the wrong hands. Treaties between countries are of little use when it comes to traditional war, so it hardly will work in this case. And there are always private enterprise and omnipotent individuals. I suspect the wrong hands are the ones already creating it... Question is how much more damage Big Tech companies like Google/Twitter/Facebook can do? There are already human shills and astroturfers trying to influence forums, Wikipedia etc. Much more of the same and maybe real humans will just become more careful online? Not sure what governments may use it for, except trying to sway public opinion (which they already do). Any ideas? |
coothead |
Aug 20 2023, 03:05 PM
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#34
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Advanced Member Group: Members Posts: 231 Joined: 12-January 23 From: chertsey, a small town 25 miles south west of london, england Member No.: 28,743 |
. Not sure what governments may use it for, except trying to . sway public opinion (which they already do). Any ideas?
coothead |
pandy |
Aug 20 2023, 03:32 PM
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#35
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🌟Computer says no🌟 Group: WDG Moderators Posts: 20,763 Joined: 9-August 06 Member No.: 6 |
I think it could be used for a lot of things. For instance what if AI instead of generals plans a war and take the strategic decisions? Add to that cadres of drones and satellites that feed it with information. All technologies that the other part may not have access too.
I think the point of the example he used was that an AI reached out into our world and that it lied about what it was. If we think telemarketers and phone scams are a PITA now, imagine when AI calls every person over 80 and convince them to buy this great cell phone deal or asks for their bank login and bank ID. |
Christian J |
Aug 20 2023, 03:54 PM
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#36
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. Group: WDG Moderators Posts: 9,739 Joined: 10-August 06 Member No.: 7 |
. Not sure what governments may use it for, except trying to . sway public opinion (which they already do). Any ideas?
coothead But much of that are things governments are already doing. Maybe AI will do it more efficiently of course, but I'm mostly curious about completely new kinds of abuses only possible with AI... |
coothead |
Aug 20 2023, 03:58 PM
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#37
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Advanced Member Group: Members Posts: 231 Joined: 12-January 23 From: chertsey, a small town 25 miles south west of london, england Member No.: 28,743 |
. imagine when AI calls every person over 80 and convinces them to . buy this great cell phone deal or asks for their bank login and bank ID.
coothead |
Christian J |
Aug 20 2023, 04:10 PM
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#38
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. Group: WDG Moderators Posts: 9,739 Joined: 10-August 06 Member No.: 7 |
I think it could be used for a lot of things. For instance what if AI instead of generals plans a war and take the strategic decisions? Add to that cadres of drones and satellites that feed it with information. All technologies that the other part may not have access too. The big fear is of course allowing an AI to start wars by itself, or escalate it to say using nuclear weapons. QUOTE I think the point of the example he used was that an AI reached out into our world and that it lied about what it was. So that AI would spontaneously make a forum post to get help solving a CAPTCHA (in turn because of some unknown spontaneous purpose)? Considering the delay before you get a reply on forums, that suggests the AI was very anxious to get past that CAPTCHA. But it's an interesting thought: a human asks an AI a question, and the AI then passes on the question to web forums (where other AI:s may reply). How did they determine it was really an AI? QUOTE If we think telemarketers and phone scams are a PITA now, imagine when AI calls every person over 80 and convince them to buy this great cell phone deal or asks for their bank login and bank ID. I have no problem with unsolicited phone calls (so far ). If this becomes a problem people must simply stop publishing their numbers. Once the consumer outrage becomes big enough maybe even the mobile providers may become more restrictive. |
pandy |
Aug 20 2023, 07:58 PM
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#39
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🌟Computer says no🌟 Group: WDG Moderators Posts: 20,763 Joined: 9-August 06 Member No.: 6 |
QUOTE I think the point of the example he used was that an AI reached out into our world and that it lied about what it was. So that AI would spontaneously make a forum post to get help solving a CAPTCHA (in turn because of some unknown spontaneous purpose)? The story doesn't tell. But it doesn't matter really if it did it on its own or was programmed to act that way. At least I haven't thought of AI as being that proactive. But that of course, I realize now, depends on what the people behind it let it do. QUOTE Considering the delay before you get a reply on forums, that suggests the AI was very anxious to get past that CAPTCHA. But it's an interesting thought: a human asks an AI a question, and the AI then passes on the question to web forums (where other AI:s may reply). Could have been a chat. Story doesn't tell that either. QUOTE QUOTE If we think telemarketers and phone scams are a PITA now, imagine when AI calls every person over 80 and convince them to buy this great cell phone deal or asks for their bank login and bank ID. I have no problem with unsolicited phone calls (so far ). If this becomes a problem people must simply stop publishing their numbers. Once the consumer outrage becomes big enough maybe even the mobile providers may become more restrictive. It is a problem already. Mainly elderly people are scammed all the time, tricked to use their Bank ID during the call and whoops - there went their savings. If 10 people can scam x elderly persons in a week how many do you think AI can scam? Phone numbers are bought and sold. The UL (local bus company) app was hacked the other week. White hat obviously, as he informed UL about the hole. He got hold of the identity of over half a million people, including email, phone numbers and buying history. No CC numbers though. Sort those people after the national identification numbers and feed the AI the identity and numbers of those born before a certain year and start the scam calls. |
pandy |
Aug 20 2023, 08:20 PM
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#40
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🌟Computer says no🌟 Group: WDG Moderators Posts: 20,763 Joined: 9-August 06 Member No.: 6 |
I actually have a friend whose boyfriend fell for one of those "Hello, I'm calling from Microsoft" calls. He's not old, but a pretty nervous type and no so good at English. So I imagine he was sweating from trying to express himself in English already and didn't have so much brain capacity left. He gave them his CC number and lost 37 000. He got it back more than half a year later without a word of explanation, neither from the bank nor the police.
I've got one of those calls too. It's amazing anyone can fall for it, but it happens. These new scams are much more smart than that. They don't speak broken English, they speak Swedish and convince the victim they are calling from their bank. |
Lo-Fi Version | Time is now: 10th November 2024 - 02:21 PM |