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vunderbalast Saturday at 10:30 PM4 repliesview on HN

Yeah I definitely think LLMs contributed to its demise. To be honest, nobody in academic AI circles took it very seriously, because it kind of devolved into a contest over who could create the most convincing illusion of intelligence.

Participants spent more time polishing up the natural language parsing aspects in conjunction with pre‑programming elaborate backstories for their chatbot's bios among other psychological tricks. In the end, the whole competition was more impressive as a social engineering exercise, since the real goal kinda became: how can I trick people into thinking my chatbot is a human?

But reading through some of the previous competition chatbot transcripts still makes for fascinating reading.


Replies

leptonslast Sunday at 1:18 AM

>because it kind of devolved into a contest over who could create the most convincing illusion of intelligence.

Isn't that really what all these AI companies are doing too? It sure seems like it is.

artikaelast Saturday at 11:48 PM

Goodhart's Law vs the Turing Test! Can our humans accurately evaluate intelligence, or will they be fooled by fakes? Live this Sunday!

djmipslast Saturday at 11:25 PM

I think it would be great to be revived with a different premise.

Moonye666last Sunday at 1:25 AM

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