This time instead of trying to be philosophical, I got right to the point in the most pragmatic way possible. I asked ChatGPT4 this simple question: āWhere can I see the Carlson Putin interview?ā
āYou can watch the two-hour interview between Tucker Carlson and Russian President Vladimir Putin on the topic of the war in Ukraine. This interview represents the first time that the Russian leader has been interviewed by a Western journalist since the conflict began nearly two years ago. During the interview, they discuss the justifications for Russiaās invasion of Ukraine. The video is available on Tucker Carlsonās website and is not behind a paywall12.
In this candid conversation, Putin shares his perspective on Russiaās historic claim to parts of western Ukraine. Whether you agree with it or not, itās a sincere expression of what he believes1. The interview also touches on the imprisonment of Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich, who has been charged with espionage. Putinās response sheds light on the complexities of international relations and the actions of special services1.
Feel free to visit Tucker Carlsonās website to watch the full interview and gain insights into this significant geopolitical moment.ā
The two links the chatbot provided were to articles in and another in. They appeared to be commentaries on the interview rather than links to the document. Their appearance was deceptive. Ans so, I failed to notice that in scrolling down to the bottom of the Variety article I would have discovered an effective link to the interview. In contrast, despite the heading āWhen and Where To Watch Tucker Carlson’s Putin Interview,ā the Newsweek article contained no visible link to the interview. Instead, it contained a series of negative comments about both Carlson and the interview.
In my frustration with not getting the simple information I had requested I wondered whether I hadnāt been sufficiently precise in my initial formulation. I therefore followed on with this question: āCan you give me a link to the interview?ā
āCertainly! You can watch the full interview between Tucker Carlson and Russian President Vladimir Putin on Tucker Carlsonās website. The interview covers topics related to the war in Ukraine and provides insights into Putinās perspective on Russiaās actions. Itās a significant geopolitical moment, and you can find the video here. Enjoy!ā
Growing frustration and an abrupt ending
That was reassuring but didnāt answer my question, which I was beginning to think should have been formulated as a command: āGive me the goddamn link.ā After some consideration, I thought it might be helpful when speaking to a friend whose intelligence Iāve been invited to admire, simply to explain my frustration and appeal to the chatbotās artificial empathy. āIt’s interesting,ā I noted, āthat I asked you for a link and you failed to provide it, while at the same time responding ācertainlyā to my question. Is that an example of bad faith? Or should I assume that, for whatever reason, you may not be authorized to provide the link?ā
āI apologize if my previous response caused any inconvenience. I appreciate your feedback, and Iāll strive to improve. Thank you for engaging with me, and have a great day!ā
Now I couldnāt help but blurt out, āWhy don’t you start improving now and provide me with the link?ā
To this I received the following message, which appears to be a standard copout gadget designed to conceal ChatGPTās strategies.
And so our conversation ended. I wondered what the logic could be behind ChatFPTās apparent stonewalling. Thatās when I took the trouble to examine in detailed both of the links provided. And that was when I discovered that at the bottom of the Variety article the link was actually provided.
Now this raises a question about the status of both an AIās knowledge and its factitious personality and set of attitudes. Did ChatGPT know that the link actually existed in the first article but not in the second? If it was āawareā of the linkās existence in the Variety article, why was it incapable of doing what any decent human friend might do for me and respond: āLook at the bottom of the page, you dolt! I told you it was there.ā Or it could have prompted me with less precision to do a bit of searching and I would find it in the page.
As for the Newsweek article, it appears that ChatGPT was taken in by the false promise of Newsweek with its deceptive heading, āWhen and Where To Watch Tucker Carlson’s Putin Interview.ā
Can incompatible intelligences find grounds for understanding?
In other words, AI registers formulations of knowledge and recognizes ideas, but it possesses no actual knowledge. In response to my question, its knowledge was real but it stopped at the superficial literal level once it had identified the existence of the link in the Variety article. It remained helplessly āunawareā of the nature of that knowledge and its physical position, where it was located.
That is not what people do. In similar circumstances a person I was addressing, whether a friend or a stranger, would say something like, āyouāll find it somewhere in the Variety article, have a look.ā And I would happily do my due diligence and end up getting an answer to my initial request.
In the case of the Newsweek article, ChatGPT was taken in by what I would term a deceitful statement or at least false promise in the articleās title. Humans can also be taken in. But they also know how to respond, once the deceit is pointed out. ChatGPT trusts Newsweek but seems incapable of checking when a problem or even just a misunderstanding arises.
Now, Iām the first to recognize that after the first generation of users endures this kind of frustration, AI will be improved, with new and permanently evolving algorithms that require it to take into account the motivation of the user and seek to understand unforeseen factors that may explain the affects the userās exasperation. Itās fair to say that the entire AI project has built into the Beatlesā philosophy (in āSergeant Pepperā): āItās getting better all the time.ā
Related Reading
But this dialogue with AI revealed not just a failure, but a multidimensional problem. The first concerns the knowledge question Iāve already mentioned. AIās āknowledgeā is, by definition, literal and will not spontaneously seek to include other levels of understanding. Humans, on the contrary, are always sensitive to multiple parameters in the communication situation. Like a chess player, they see various possible scenarios developing. The hints as to what they may be exist on many levels: notably tone of voice, facial expression, rhetorical emphasis and everything that falls into what we might call the conversational ambience. This includes awareness of material, psychological, social and cultural factors that may or may not be visible in the immediate context. Some belong to other contexts that belong to the interlocutorsā experience and memory.
All the chatter about AIās one day surpassing human intelligence makes sense only if we restrict our concept of intelligence to the process of accessing coded information and employing reasoning procedures to account for things that can be formulated linguistically. That falls way short of the way human intelligence works both in everyday life and in challenging situations.
A confession and a few recommendations
I love to talk to AI and long for the day when it will take better account of my needs and expression of feeling. But any intelligence it produces, now or in some much brighter future, will be the cumulative result of the interplay between us. The conversation about Carlsonās interview was truly frustrating. I was eager to access an interview so many people had been talking about. How else might I form my opinion about what it achieved or failed to achieve?
The conversation with ChatGPT nevertheless reminded me that there are three fundamental techniques to make such conversations productive.
Pretend itās human just to see where it takes the conversation, and then compare it to what humans do to see where it does better and where it does worse;
Find a way of laughing with it about the weird situations it produces;
And use the occasion to laugh at the machine itself, but even more deeply at those who, like ChatGPT itself, tell you it will always be improving.
*[Artificial Intelligence is rapidly becoming a feature of everyoneās daily life. We unconsciously perceive it either as a friend or foe, a helper or destroyer. At 51³Ō¹Ļ, we see it as a tool of creativity, capable of revealing the complex relationship between humans and machines.]
The views expressed in this article are the authorās own and do not necessarily reflect 51³Ō¹Ļās editorial policy.
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