If we’re sending text, then it can prove speed superintelligence by, e.g. simply answering many complicated questions all sent at once.
If we have to use voice, we can still try to ask hard questions and get fast answers, but because of the lower rate it’s hard to push far past human limits. I can ask some pretty darn hard trivia questions with unambiguous answers, but someone with very good googling skills might be able to fool me.
One cute method might be to do something superhuman with the transmitted audio. For example, if it could tell how a die fell by listening to the sound of it rolling, read off handwritten digits from the faint sounds of writing, or typed letters from the acoustics of the keyboard.
Some of these things are falsifiable, for example people have already made programs that can detect letters from acoustics, and trivia questions would similarly be pretty easy, but the idea of asking a question that requires complicated processing to find the answer and requiring a superhumanly fast response seems like it might be the best. The trick would be that it would have to be a question that couldn’t have been answered in advance (question can’t be predictable, so that a person or organization could have prepared answers).
So it sounds like you’d need to be able to generate a question that 1. requires human-level or above reasoning, including generalization 2. is too complex for a human to quickly answer 3. cannot be predicted in form or content to an extent that would allow its answer to be cached in advance
If we have to use voice, we can still try to ask hard questions and get fast answers, but because of the lower rate itâs hard to push far past human limits.
You could go with IQ-test-type progressively harder number sequences.Use big numbers that are hard to calculate in your head.
E.g. start with a random 3 digit number, each following number is the previous squared minus 17. If he/she figures it out in 1 second he must be an ai.
If we’re sending text, then it can prove speed superintelligence by, e.g. simply answering many complicated questions all sent at once.
If we have to use voice, we can still try to ask hard questions and get fast answers, but because of the lower rate it’s hard to push far past human limits. I can ask some pretty darn hard trivia questions with unambiguous answers, but someone with very good googling skills might be able to fool me.
One cute method might be to do something superhuman with the transmitted audio. For example, if it could tell how a die fell by listening to the sound of it rolling, read off handwritten digits from the faint sounds of writing, or typed letters from the acoustics of the keyboard.
Some of these things are falsifiable, for example people have already made programs that can detect letters from acoustics, and trivia questions would similarly be pretty easy, but the idea of asking a question that requires complicated processing to find the answer and requiring a superhumanly fast response seems like it might be the best. The trick would be that it would have to be a question that couldn’t have been answered in advance (question can’t be predictable, so that a person or organization could have prepared answers).
So it sounds like you’d need to be able to generate a question that 1. requires human-level or above reasoning, including generalization 2. is too complex for a human to quickly answer 3. cannot be predicted in form or content to an extent that would allow its answer to be cached in advance
You could go with IQ-test-type progressively harder number sequences.Use big numbers that are hard to calculate in your head.
E.g. start with a random 3 digit number, each following number is the previous squared minus 17. If he/she figures it out in 1 second he must be an ai.