Tenshinai wrote:Ask an AI how its day was and you will either get a canned, shorthand standardised reply, or you will get something inanely stupid.
In most human interactions you also get a canned response. Try telling someone how your day really was and watch their eyes glaze over since they are not expecting a "real" answer.
Try telling an AI that it´s panties are on fire. Better yet, say that while some distance away, well within sight, someone is burning some panties.
The reaction you get will also depend on the audience and the context of your statement. A child will react differently to a college age male, a woman may have a different take and telling that to someone from Portugal or Sierra Leone may elicit either a totally unexpected answer or a puzzled look.
Try explaining British humour to an American, or American humour to a Brit to see how culture and context change things.
Since this is a real challenge for humans, I'm not surprised that no one has figured this out for AI either.
The fact that current generations of computers and AI are about as smart as cockroaches simply means we have a lot to learn. It took nature about 4 billion years of evolution to move from pond scum and bacteria to multi cellular life, and 500 million years to go from multicellular life to complex, thinking organisms. The human family tree may reach as far back as 5 million years, but behaviour we interpret as proto "thinking" goes back about 1 million years or so, and while anatomically modern humans have been around for 200,000 years, behaviourally modern humans only date back to @ 50,000 ears ago.
So I would not make bold statements about AI in either direction; we have a lot left to discover and learn how to implement.