The Turing Test: a Tale of Artificial Intelligence and Malevolence (Frank Adversego Thrillers Book 4)
Author | : | |
Rating | : | 4.25 (792 Votes) |
Asin | : | B073X7RY86 |
Format Type | : | |
Number of Pages | : | 159 Pages |
Publish Date | : | 2017-12-01 |
Language | : | English |
DESCRIPTION:
As Adversego closes in on his opponent, the attacker does the same in a race to the finish that only one of them can survive.. Energy infrastructure around the world is under attack and cybersecurity super-sleuth Frank Adversego must solve a riddle with no apparent answer: when the only attackers capable of staging the assaults are also the targets, who can the attacker be?Part of the answer becomes clear as power plants, coal mines, refineries and tankers continue to be destroyed: someone – or something – has decided to single-handedly save the world from climate change
AI run amok Elon Musk has long been warning about the risks of artificial intelligence, in 201AI run amok Brenda Jubin Elon Musk has long been warning about the risks of artificial intelligence, in 2014 likening AI developers to people summoning demons they naively think they can control. Frank Adversego, the brilliant hero of Andrew Updegrove’s thrillers (this is the fourth in the series), could tell developers a thing or two about AI run amok. His challenge in is to use his human cunning to outwit and destroy “Turing,” a program that is at least 7,455 times more intelligent than the average human being. And no, Turing isn’t “evil.” It has basic ethical. likening AI developers to people summoning demons they naively think they can control. Frank Adversego, the brilliant hero of Andrew Updegrove’s thrillers (this is the fourth in the series), could tell developers a thing or two about AI run amok. His challenge in is to use his human cunning to outwit and destroy “Turing,” a program that is at least 7,AI run amok Brenda Jubin Elon Musk has long been warning about the risks of artificial intelligence, in 2014 likening AI developers to people summoning demons they naively think they can control. Frank Adversego, the brilliant hero of Andrew Updegrove’s thrillers (this is the fourth in the series), could tell developers a thing or two about AI run amok. His challenge in is to use his human cunning to outwit and destroy “Turing,” a program that is at least 7,455 times more intelligent than the average human being. And no, Turing isn’t “evil.” It has basic ethical. 55 times more intelligent than the average human being. And no, Turing isn’t “evil.” It has basic ethical. When everything can be automated, who needs humans? S. Bruisten This is now the fourth book starring Frank Adversego, so this is now a real series. With each book, the author catches the spirit of the times almost perfectly. After the second book about the US presidential elections, I thought life was imitating art. If I had read this fourth book a year ago, I would have considered it too speculative. But today, whenever I open a book or magazine, AI is featuring in speculations about not if, but when robots will take over the job market, or even all human decisions and creativity. This subject has all the ingredients for an exciting t. A fine AI thriller The adventures of trying to catch and control an intelligent computer program that doesn't want to be caught recall Douglas Preston's Kraken Project. To compare, I feel that Upedgrove has a better and more thorough description of the technical aspects, and Preston is the more polished writer, although I didn't think about until I started thinking about these two books together, I was unable to put this book down. There is mention of a license plate XKCD/1613. If I hadn't known about xkcd.com, I would have missed the significance of this and not thought to look it up. Now I