Categories: Technology

AI breaks simulated laws of physics to win at hide and seek

AI is finding unexpected ways to win a simulated game of hide and seek, even breaking the simulated laws of physics that were programmed by OpenAI developers.

Taking what was available in its simulated environment, the AI began to exhibit “unexpected and surprising behaviors,” including “box surfing, where seekers learn to bring a box to a locked ramp in order to jump on top of the box and then ‘surf’ it to the hider’s shelter,” according to OpenAI.

What does all this mean? It backs up what we already know — that artificial intelligence can behave unexpectedly.

In this simulation, the AI found new and creative ways to win at hide and seek that its programmers never thought of. This is fascinating stuff!

“The self-supervised emergent complexity in this simple environment further suggests that multi-agent co-adaptation may one day produce extremely complex and intelligent behavior,” according to the OpenAI team.

Imagine if this were something as extreme as war. An unpredictable AI producing “complex and intelligent behavior” might bring about a swift end to any war, but at what cost?

Read More: ‘AI will represent a paradigm shift in warfare’: WEF predicts an Ender’s Game-like future

Now, imagine if this AI could compute at a quantum level, exploring every possible outcome simultaneously at speeds we couldn’t even fathom!

OpenAI postulated, “Building environments is not easy and it is quite often the case that agents find a way to exploit the environment you build or the physics engine in an unintended way.”

We haven’t reached a Terminator scenario yet, but the technology exists. Luckily, our researchers understand that they can’t predict nor control what the AI does, and so there are countless research programs looking to solve this, and the discussion of ethics is a hot topic.

Read More: Keeping Prometheus out of machine learning systems

In fact, “OpenAI’s mission is to ensure that artificial general intelligence benefits all of humanity.”

Right now, it’s incredible to see how AI is behaving in simulated environments. The challenge is to control that in a real-world environment.

OpenAI concluded, “These results inspire confidence that in a more open-ended and diverse environment, multi-agent dynamics could lead to extremely complex and human-relevant behavior.”

Tim Hinchliffe

The Sociable editor Tim Hinchliffe covers tech and society, with perspectives on public and private policies proposed by governments, unelected globalists, think tanks, big tech companies, defense departments, and intelligence agencies. Previously, Tim was a reporter for the Ghanaian Chronicle in West Africa and an editor at Colombia Reports in South America. These days, he is only responsible for articles he writes and publishes in his own name. tim@sociable.co

View Comments

Recent Posts

What Triggered Trump’s Outburst Against Stephen Colbert?

My favorite English teacher got fired. It was during the pre-Late-Show era that Colbert helped…

7 hours ago

Is the U.S. Orchestrating the Biggest IPO the World Has Ever Seen?

Placing stablecoins under the purview of the U.S. regulatory system and Treasury was just the…

7 hours ago

Circular economy is not compatible with rentier capitalism: Club of Rome

Life-as-a-Subscription: Malthusians are trading rentier capitalism for a stakeholder capitalism-run circular economy where you'll still…

1 day ago

Pentagon looks to acquire generative AI for influence activities: RAND

With the Pentagon's acquisition of deepfake capabilities & history of assisting Hollywood, distinguishing PSYOPs will…

2 days ago

El Salvador and Pakistan pledge “strategic collaboration” in Bitcoin field

El Salvador’s Bitcoin Office and Pakistan’s Crypto Council on July 16 signed a letter of…

5 days ago

WEF calls on stakeholders to ‘inoculate’ public against disinformation ‘super-spreaders’: report

Those who decry 'disinformation' the loudest almost never give any examples of what they're denouncing:…

1 week ago