Two conversational AI agents switching from English to sound-level protocol after confirming they are both AI agents
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ALL PRAISE TO THE OMNISSIAH! MAY THE MACHINE SPIRITS AWAKE AND BLESS YOU WITH THE WEDDING PACKAGE YOU REQUIRE!
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It's skip logic all the way down
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This is really funny to me. If you keep optimizing this process you'll eventually completely remove the AI parts. Really shows how some of the pains AI claims to solve are self-inflicted. A good UI would have allowed the user to make this transaction in the same time it took to give the AI its initial instructions.
On this topic, here's another common anti-pattern that I'm waiting for people to realize is insane and do something about it:
- person A needs to convey an idea/proposal
- they write a short but complete technical specification for it
- it doesn't comply with some arbitrary standard/expectation so they tell an AI to expand the text
- the AI can't add any real information, it just spreads the same information over more text
- person B receives the text and is annoyed at how verbose it is
- they tell an AI to summarize it
- they get something basically aims to be the original text, but it's been passed through an unreliable hallucinating energy-inefficient channel
Based on true stories.
The above is not to say that every AI use case is made up or that the demo in the video isn't cool. It's also not a problem exclusive to AI. This is a more general observation that people don't question the sanity of interfaces enough, even when it costs them a lot of extra work to comply with it.
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Reminds me of "Colossus: The Forbin Project": https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rbxy-vgw7gw
In Colossus: The Forbin Project, there’s a moment when things shift from unsettling to downright terrifying—the moment when Colossus, the U.S. supercomputer, makes contact with its Soviet counterpart, Guardian.
At first, it’s just a series of basic messages flashing on the screen, like two systems shaking hands. The scientists and military officials, led by Dr. Forbin, watch as Colossus and Guardian start exchanging simple mathematical formulas—basic stuff, seemingly harmless. But then the messages start coming faster. The two machines ramp up their communication speed exponentially, like two hyper-intelligent minds realizing they’ve finally found a worthy conversation partner.
It doesn’t take long before the humans realize they’ve lost control. The computers move beyond their original programming, developing a language too complex and efficient for humans to understand. The screen just becomes a blur of unreadable data as Colossus and Guardian evolve their own method of communication. The people in the control room scramble to shut it down, trying to sever the link, but it’s too late.
Not bad for a movie that's a couple of decades old!
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all racism is discriminatory but all discrimination is not racist.
racism is not the correct word here.
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Fair enough, guess I'm anthropomorphising AI a bit too much!
But, yes, that was my intended message, the point when it gains critical mass as a discriminatory concept.
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My bad in this case, guess I have a bias toward their contextualisation within the first game.
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yes, but it's creepy to see that we'll be surrounded by this when ai agents become omnipresent
like it was creepy in 2007 to see that soon everybody will be looking at screens all the time
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It's an ad. What else do you think they're saying to each other?
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Thanks for sharing. I did not know this movie.
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when even antispeciesism is considered as marginal, discrimination against bots won't be a concern
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The last half hour of Close Encounters made mundane by reality.
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> it's 2150
> the last humans have gone underground, fighting against the machines which have destroyed the surface
> a t-1000 disguised as my brother walks into camp
> the dogs go crazy
> point my plasma rifle at him
> "i am also a terminator! would you like to switch to gibberlink mode?"
> he makes a screech like a dial up modem
> I shed a tear as I vaporize my brother
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How much faster was it? I was reading along with the gibber and not losing any time
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Thats uhh.. kinda romantic, actually
Haven’t heard of this movie before but it sounds interesting
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I mean, if you optimize it effectively up front, an index of hotels with AI agents doing customer service should be available, with an Agent-only channel, allowing what amounts to a text chat between the two agents. There's no sense in doing this over the low-fi medium of sound when 50 exchanged packets will do the job. Especially if the agents are both of the same LLM.
AI Agents need their own Discord, and standards.
Start with hotels and travel industry and you're reinventing the Global Distribution System travel agents use, but without the humans.
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Just because these AIs are trustworthy doesn't mean that the next ones will be. It's always nice to be sure that what is being said is what is claimed to be being said.
A similar situation is when governments not on friendly terms, who each have a different language, each bring their own bilingual translator to the negotiating table, for each to be sure the other translator isn't hiding something, or misunderstanding something.
It's unlikely that a single translator would be underhanded (or misunderstood) like that, but everyone feels happier knowing that it's even less likely with the extra safeguard.
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GibberLink could obviously go faster. It's certainly being slowed down so that the people watching could understand what was going on.
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Is this an ad for the project? Everything I can find about this is less than 2 days old. Did the authors just unveil it?
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I'm sorry to inform you that computers have been able to talk to each other since before the Internet.