Well, yes, if you make the test non-adaptive, it’s (exponentially) easier to pass. For example, if you limit the “conversation” to a game of chess, it’s already possible. But those aren’t the “full” Turing Test; they’re domain-specific variants. Your criticism would only apply to the latter.
Are AI players actually indistinguishable from humans in Chess? Could an interrogator not pick out consistent stylistic differences between equally-ranked human and AI players?
Well, yes, if you make the test non-adaptive, it’s (exponentially) easier to pass. For example, if you limit the “conversation” to a game of chess, it’s already possible. But those aren’t the “full” Turing Test; they’re domain-specific variants. Your criticism would only apply to the latter.
Are AI players actually indistinguishable from humans in Chess? Could an interrogator not pick out consistent stylistic differences between equally-ranked human and AI players?