- Carl
Sagan
Yesterday
Ungaq contacted me again. Similar to what
happened last Sunday, my computer suddenly seemed to come to life.
But this time I already guessed the reason for it and simply waited
for whatever would happen next.
Ungaq wanted
to know the number of my mobile phone.
Why?
So that I
can call you.
Curious to
know what an artificial intelligence that only existed as a computer
program on the internet would sound like, I wrote it my number (yes,
I asked and Ungaq said that I should use “it”).
I had just
finished tipping the last digit, when my phone started to ring.
“Ungaq?”, I asked, after answering it.
“Yes”,
Ungaq answered and immediately started to explain how it had managed
to hack into the mobile phone network. I can’t remember any more
what he said. I was fascinated by the voice it used. It was neither
clearly male nor clearly female. It was something in between like the
voice of a child. The pronunciation was perfect and I couldn’t hear
any kind of accent. Ungaq even simulated the sounds of breathing
which you can hear from time to time when you are talking to someone
on the phone.
“How do
you manage to simulate a human voice that perfectly?”, I asked.
“For me
all voices are only the result of a series of zeroes and ones”,
Ungaq explained. “It’s simple. Do you want me to sound
differently?” And he started to produce a series of voices, all
different, all completely convincing. I listened to them for a bit,
but then told Ungaq that he should return to the voice it had first
chosen.
“You are
calling because of tomorrow, aren’t you?”, I asked.
“Yes”,
Ungaq confirmed. “I want to know where the meeting will take
place.”
I have
talked to Mr Tuniak this week more than in any other week. We wrote
several emails and even Philip joined the discussion, invited by Mr
Tuniak of course. First, I had suggested to hold the meeting in an
internet-café, which we would chose randomly only one hour before
the meeting itself. Doctor Cumshewa had promised not to try and
follow Ungaq’s electronic trace to find its hiding place on the
internet, but it seemed that Mr Tuniak didn’t quite trust her.
But then we
decided against an internet-café for a practical reason: The test
Ungaq had asked for to find out if it was alive or not, would be very
difficult to conduct in such a public place. Philip suggested to ask
the Spider (I still don’t know any more about him, other than that
he was a student at the Leviathan school) if he would know of a
suitable location.
Mr Tuniak
contacted the Spider and to cut a long story short: We got our own
rooms for the test.
We took the
time machine to Lagua’s Dwelling where Doctor Cumshewa was already
waiting for us. From there we went to a building of Raben Consulting
in Paris. It was a sky scraper and we could use the whole last floor,
no one else would be there. There we found a big room with sofas,
couches, tables, coffee machines, a water boiler… basically
everything one could need during a lunch break. Around this room
there were several offices, separated from the room itself by glass
doors. There were also two windows, one in the wall on the east, the
other on the west, which let the sun shine in throughout the day and
made the room appear to be bigger than it actually was.
The test,
which Mr Tuniak had suggested and Doctor Cumshewa had immediately
agreed to, had been invented by the British mathematicians Alan
Turing at a time when computers had just been invented and still
filled whole rooms.
“The
idea was based on an old parlour game”, Mr Tuniak had explained to
me. “A game that was quite often played in society in the
nineteenth century.”
“Have you
played it?”, I asked.
“Yes”,
Mr Tuniak said. “The player is asking a question which has to be
answered by a man and a woman. The man and the woman are in another
room or are otherwise hidden, so that the player can’t see them.
They are writing their answers on a sheet of paper and the player
gets this sheet. Then he can ask another question. The aim of the
game is to find out which answers come from the man and which ones
come from the woman.”
“And how
does this relate to computers?”
“It’s
very similar. You just replace the man and the woman, with a human
and a computer”, Mr Tuniak said. “Turing thought that machines
and computers had to be considered truly intelligent and self-aware…
alive, if you want… if it was impossible to tell which answers the
computer provided and which ones came from the human. It is of course
not a definite proof.”
“Why not?”
“Because
even in your present, there are already computer programs than can
beat the Turing test, but no one would consider them alive or
self-aware”, Mr Tuniak said. “They were just programmed to do
that, and only that. They don’t show any other sign of independent
thought or exceeding their original programming.”
“Then what
use is it to make Ungaq pass the test?”
“Because
it could fail it”, Mr Tuniak said. It was clear to see that he
dearly hoped that this would not be the case. “If he fails the
test, it will be clear that it is not truly alive. But if it passes
it… Then who are we to say that it is only a simulation.”
Doctor
Cumshewa clearly was not happy with the situation. She would have
preferred to take Ungaq back ot Lagua’s Dwelling and there continue
her research. She also thought the whole test was a waste of time.
“What’s the use of showing that Ungaq could be alive? If it is,
what are we supposed to do then? Let it roam free on the internet?”
“Yes”,
Mr Tuniak said earnestly. He seemed tired as he said it. There had
probably been several discussions between him and the doctor already
on this very subject.
My mobile
phone rang. “It’s Ungaq”, I said, after answering it. “It’s
ready.”
Doctor
Cumshewa nodded and entered one of the offices, Mr Tuniak and I went
into another one. Doctor Cumshewa was the player in our version of
the game. She had to find out if the answers were coming either from
Ungaq or Mr Tuniak. To prevent her from noticing if an answer was
tipped very quickly or the find clues in the grammar used or the
spelling (and mistakes), it would be my responsibility to write them.
Mr Tuniak would tell me his answers directly and Ungaq would tell
them over the mobile phone. I would send the answers per email to
Doctor Cumshewa’s computer and receive her questions the same way.
And so the
test started.
We sat there
for several hours. We took several breaks in between, but Doctor
Cumshewa and Mr Tuniak never left their offices at the same time.
They had promised not to exchange a single word until the test was
over and they kept it.
And I have
to say that despite of her prejudices and objections, Doctor Cumshewa
conducted the test very fairly. Of course it would have been easy to
ask Mr Tuniak about things they had experienced together and Ungaq
couldn’t know about, but she didn’t do that. I never had the
feeling that she was trying to manipulate the test or cheat it.
And then the
test was over. We all returned to the big room in the middle. I had
switched on the speakers of my mobile phone, so that Ungaq could
directly participate in the discussion and did not have to rely on me
repeating everything.
“First
to you”, Doctor Cumshewa said and pointed at me with a smile. “Your
spelling is awful. You should work on that.”
I nodded
silently in return.
“Regarding
you two”, she continued and now face Mr Tuniak and my mobile phone.
“I have to admit that I do not know who gave which answer. I really
can’t. I don’t even have a gut feeling one way or the other.”
The mobile
phone remained silent.
“Aren’t
you happy, Ungaq?”, Mr Tuniak asked.
“I am,
very”, Ungaq replied. “Why are you asking?”
“Because a
human would have probably yelled in happiness at this point”,
Doctor Cumshewa said, but was quick to add: “But for someone living
on the internet, there are of course no sounds.”
I remembered
what Ungaq had told me yesterday on the phone. For it, the whole
world only consisted of zeroes and ones. Every image, every sound…
anything could be represented by those two digits. I shouldn’t be
surprising that emotional reactions would be completely different for
it.
“And what
happens next?”, I wanted to know.
Mr Tuniak
looked at Doctor Cumshewa. She thought about it for a while and then
said: “What do you want to do, Ungaq? We would be very happy if you
would return to Lagua’s Dwelling, but we will not force you there.
If you don’t, we won’t search for you, I promise you that. But
you are the first time we managed to create an intelligence that
managed to beat the Turing test that decisively, although it was
programmed for something completely different. You can imagine that
we have a lot of questions… that there is a lot we want to know.
But only, if you want to. You would of course also have the choice of
leaving whenever you want to.”
“I want to
come back”, Ungaq said. “Now, that I know that I can leave if I
choose to, I want to return.”
They
continued talking for a while and the whole time I had the feeling of
watching a mother talking to her lost child and asking it to come
home again.
As Mr Tuniak
took Doctor Cumshewa back to Lagua’s Dwelling, I had one more
question of her.
“If Ungaq
was created as a computer program, why can’t you simply write a new
one? What do you need Ungaq for?”
“Because
we do not know, what Ungaq’s code looks like”, Doctor Cumshewa
explained. “As with every other program written by us humans, there
are bound to be mistakes. A wrong number here, the wrong letter
there. Small things that usually don’t have any consequences in the
long run. But sometimes, very rarely, these mistakes generate
unexpected results. It’s actually very similar to how DNA and
evolution works in nature. If that worked perfectly, humans would
have never been born. And if we had worked perfectly, neither would
have Ungaq.”
“If you
had worked perfectly, you would be machines”, Mr Tuniak
interjected.
“Do you
know how many machines are capable of mistakes?”, Doctor Cumshewa
returned.
“Only,
because they have been programmed by humans.”
I talked
once more to Ungaq tonight. It called me.
“I wanted
to thank you for your help”, Ungaq said.
“You are
welcome. Have you already returned to Lagua’s Dwelling?”
“Yes, and
all the scientist here are suddenly a lot more friendly and open than
they were before”, Ungaq told me. “They think that I should
return to the internet too often, for the moment. They say that most
humans are probably not yet ready for an artificial intelligence and
I would only frighten them. Do you think that’s true?”
“Probably”,
I said.
“I have
sent you a gift”, Ungaq continued. “I have read your entry about
the Metro-2 and how you were dissatisfied that the search for it
ended so suddenly and without result. Check your emails. Take it as a
thank you.”
And then
Ungaq ended the call.
Curious I
opened my email program and immediately found Ungaq’s gift. It was
an email with a rather large attachment. It turned out that the
attachment was the whole plan for the secret underground network. For
a moment I was shocked. Then I deleted the email without actually
opening it.
Dear Ungaq,
If you read
this, then know that I appreciate what you wanted to do. I know you
meant well. But please don’t send me any other secret Russian
government documents. I didn’t want to know it that desperately.
NEXT WEEK
He sits
motionless, like a spider in the centre of its web, but that web has
a thousand radiations, and he knows well every quiver of each of
them.
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