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    4 Kommentare

    1. QuantumQuicksilver on

      Cortical Labs‘ CL1 platform uses 800,000 living human neurons on a chip, forming a real-time closed-loop interface with software — in this case, learning to play Doom. The neurons show signs of adaptive learning that silicon alone can’t replicate, and the potential efficiency gains over traditional AI are significant. But no existing regulatory framework covers this technology. The same biological similarity that makes these neurons valuable is what makes the ethical questions so urgent — nobody is asking whether they can suffer, or what a future of sentient biological computers actually looks like.

    2. irascible_Clown on

      This explains why in a lot of movies and sci fi books ships in the future sometimes are living ships.

    3. Someone more clever than I noted that its probably a bad idea, to grow a disembodied brain, hook it up to a virtual hell, and give it guns.

    4. TF-Fanfic-Resident on

      > The neurons show signs of adaptive learning that silicon alone can’t replicate

      Hopefully this is just a bridge to better AI as opposed to a fundamental limit of silicon and metal chips. Are there any reasons to think that it might be a fundamental issue with inorganic materials?

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