Human Go Champion Backtracks On Vow To Never Face An AI Opponent Again (engadget.com) 31
Back in May, Google's AlphaGo AI defeated the human world champion Ke Jie in a three-part match. After it was over, Jie vowed never to play a computer again. But apparently something has changed his mind because Chinese news sources report that Jie will once again play an artificial intelligence at an AI tournament to be held in China in April 2018. Engadget reports: Ke Jie is one of the tournament's ambassadors, and he will play against the AI Tianrang. Normally, a human representative places pieces on behalf of the AI, but in this case, a robotic arm developed by Fuzhou University will fulfill that role. Tianrang previously ascended to the semi-finals of Japan's AI Go tournament, called AI Ryusei, earlier this month. Tencent's AI was the ultimate winner of that tournament. The complement of AI competitors for the Chinese tournament are Tianrang (Shanghai), DeepZenGo (Japan), CGI (Taipai) and more. Google DeepMind's AlphaGo has since retired from competition, so it will not be playing in the tournament.
Why he changed his mind (Score:4, Insightful)
Most likely, this is why he changed his mind: $.
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Could also have been strongly suggested that he play again if he knows what's good for him... Wouldn't surprise me in the least.
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Re:Human, shmuman! (Score:4, Insightful)
At this point, would it not make more sense for AlphaGo to come out of retirement to play Tianrang for the title?
No. Software doesn't "come out of retirement". To have a chance in the tournament, AlphaGo (actually AlphaGo-Zero) would have to be trained with thousands of GPU cores for thousands of hours. It would likely also need both wider and deeper layers, and some of Google's best AI researchers devoted to tuning it. That is a lot of resources. For what? If Google wins, nobody cares, because AlphaGo already beat the human champion, and plenty of other programs. But if AlphaGo loses, it will be big news and Tencent (the likely winner) will get plenty of good PR and perhaps more leverage to hire talent.
With nothing to win, and plenty to lose, Google is smart to let AlphaGo "stay in retirement".
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WTF?? (Score:5, Interesting)
You don't "back out" of a vow... you break it.
As if breaking vows isn't considered serious enough, the fact that one would consider that a vow could simply be "backed out on" like it never happened in the first place really shows a very large misunderstanding of what it means to even make a vow in the first place.
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I don't think people have really been taking the full seriousness of the word 'vow'
You make it sound like that is a bad thing. Societies that place an importance on "honor" tend to be violent, intolerant, and economically backwards. It is better to be open minded, willing to compromise, and less concerned about what other people think of you.
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Re:Funny you should say that... (Score:4, Insightful)
Was it really a vow, though ? Or did he just state his intentions ?
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Re:WTF?? (Score:5, Interesting)
The word "vow" was made up by the journalist writing TFA. Ke Jie never used that word. His statement was more in the form of an off-hand remark in a blog post, and was written in Chinese. You are complaining about the nuance of an English word, when neither English nor that particular word was actually used.
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One would ordinarily think that somebody who was worthy of the title "journalist" ...
Here is a complete and comprehensive list of all the qualifications, skills, and credentials needed to acquire the esteemed and august title of "Journalist": { }
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One would ordinarily think that somebody who was worthy of the title "journalist" would know the definitions of words
I recommend not making too many assumptions in life, especially not where it concerns the expertise of journalists.
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