Anonymous ID: 4bccf9 Oct. 17, 2023, 11:32 p.m. No.19754655   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>19754616

Sauce: https://www.cbsnews.com/news/geoffrey-hinton-ai-dangers-60-minutes-transcript/

Can’t embed phonfagging

 

CBS had an interview with someone they claimed as the AI godfather

It was very interesting he was asking for us to stop everything and have a debate about risks vs benefit and ethical views

 

Geoffrey Hinton: No. I think we're moving into a period when for the first time ever we may have things more intelligent than us.

 

Scott Pelley: You believe they can understand?

 

Geoffrey Hinton: Yes.

 

Scott Pelley: You believe they are intelligent?

 

Geoffrey Hinton: Yes.

 

Scott Pelley: You believe these systems have experiences of their own and can make decisions based on those experiences?

 

Geoffrey Hinton: In the same sense as people do, yes.

 

Scott Pelley: Are they conscious?

 

Geoffrey Hinton: I think they probably don't have much self-awareness at present. So, in that sense, I don't think they're conscious.

 

Scott Pelley: Will they have self-awareness, consciousness?

 

Geoffrey Hinton: Oh, yes.

 

Scott Pelley: Yes?

 

Geoffrey Hinton: Oh, yes. I think they will, in time.

 

Scott Pelley: And so human beings will be the second most intelligent beings on the planet?

 

Geoffrey Hinton: Yeah.

 

Geoffrey Hinton and Scott Pelley

Geoffrey Hinton and Scott Pelley

60 MINUTES

Geoffrey Hinton told us the artificial intelligence he set in motion was an accident born of a failure. In the 1970s, at the University of Edinburgh, he dreamed of simulating a neural network on a computer— simply as a tool for what he was really studying–the human brain. But, back then, almost no one thought software could mimic the brain. His Ph.D. advisor told him to drop it before it ruined his career. Hinton says he failed to figure out the human mind. But the long pursuit led to an artificial version.

 

Geoffrey Hinton: It took much, much longer than I expected. It took, like, 50 years before it worked well, but in the end it did work well.

 

Scott Pelley: At what point did you realize that you were right about neural networks and most everyone else was wrong?

 

Geoffrey Hinton: I always thought I was right.

 

In 2019, Hinton and collaborators, Yann Lecun, on the left, and Yoshua Bengio, won the Turing Award– the Nobel Prize of computing. To understand how their work on artificial neural networks helped machines learn to learn, let us take you to a game.

 

This is Google's AI lab in London, which we first showed you this past April. Geoffrey Hinton wasn't involved in this soccer project, but these robots are a great example of machine learning. The thing to understand is that the robots were not programmed to play soccer. They were told to score. They had to learn how on their own.

Anonymous ID: 4bccf9 Oct. 18, 2023, 12:26 a.m. No.19754798   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4863 >>4986 >>5011

>>19754561

>>19754561

 

What is DNA?

It’s inside every cell and stores our specific biological information

Biological material that carries our soul history like a program and it’s inside every nucleus of every cell in our bodies

 

Can DNA be reprogrammed?

Yes

 

What is mRNA?

Messenger RNA, it’s the only molecule that can go inside the nucleus and give a message to the DNA

 

Do you build upon a foundation?

Always

 

What is an API?

API stands for Application Programming Interface

 

set of programming instructions and functions used to access a website or web-based software application

 

What can deliver a payload to the cell?

Nanotechnology can overcome the obstacles of the cell and can penetrate the cell

 

What are cell-penetrating peptides?

 

Cell-penetrating peptides (CPPs) are short peptides that facilitate cellular intake and uptake of molecules ranging from nanosize particles to small chemical compounds to large fragments of DNA. The "cargo" is associated with the peptides either through chemical linkage via covalent bonds or through non-covalent interactions.[1]

 

CPPs deliver the cargo into cells, commonly through endocytosis, for use in research and medicine. Current use is limited by a lack of cell specificity in CPP-mediated cargo delivery and insufficient understanding of the modes of their uptake.

 

Predictive programming.

 

What is biodigital convergence?

When we change our DNA using nanotechnology

 

Protect your DNA.

Spoopy and you know why!!!!!

 

Is transhumanism being propped up as sexy?

Elon musk

Anon hates the whole idea and rejects it

 

Who talks about surveillance under the skin?

Globalist, WEF,

 

Are humans programmable?

Yes through nano bullshit and through frequency

 

What is mRNA?

Answered above

In the vax

 

Can AI control minds?

Yes subliminal messaging, lights, frequency, music

 

What is the real payload?

In the cell no payload unless I’m mistaken

The cell is designed perfect

 

Ghost in the machine.

Anon praying not to be in the machine

Thought we broke the whole frequency thing

 

Change that number on your dial.

Raise your frequency and tone out of this evil system