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New Statesman -- Turing Test winners
No 4212
Set by Leonora Casement As part of 2012’s celebrations to mark the life and influence of the 20th-century mathematician and code-breaker Alan Turing, Reading University is running a special one-day event, Turing100, on what would have been his 100th birthday. This will feature a display of the Turing Test, a Q&A session designed to test the ability of machines to pass as human. If a judge cannot reliably tell machine from human, the machine is said to have passed the test. We asked you to think up a Q&A session with anyone (human, animal, machine) to confound the judge. This week’s winners Superb. This week John Palmer sent in an actual Q&A session that featured on Newsnight in 1997, with Michael Howard questioned at length by Jeremy Paxman. While an example of machine-like responses, we felt it couldn’t really win a prize. However, you get a £5 book token for remembering it: Q Did you threaten to overrule Mr Lewis and suspend the governor of Parkhurst? A I have given a full account of my actions to parliament. Q Did you threaten to overrule Mr Lewis? A The position is what I told the House of Commons. Q Did you threaten to overrule Mr Lewis? A I was entitled to express my view. Q Did you threaten to overrule Mr Lewis? A The governor was not suspended, he was moved. Q But did you threaten to overrule Mr Lewis? A I did not overrule Mr Lewis. Q Could you answer the question? A I have accounted for my actions to the House of Commons. But, however good it was to be reminded of this, it actually broke the rules – the answers not the questions were supposed to throw doubt over whether that individual was a machine or not. The winners get £25 each, with the Tesco vouchers going, in addition, to Brian D Allingham. Rough, rough Q How do you feel whe you wake up after a heavy night’s drinking? A Rough. Q What do you call the area beside the fairway on a golf course? A Rough. Q What is the outer skin of a tree called? A Bark. Q What is a three-masted, square-sterned sailing ship called? A Barque. Q Complete this phrase – “warp and . . .” A Woof. Q What’s the covering of a house? A Woof. Brian D Allingham Editorial policy Q Would you work freely as a journalist for the British tabloid press, take a job as a columnist in a right-wing red top or become an editor of one of the most reactionary newspapers in the western world? A Yes. Q Would you be at ease publishing a story without knowing how information was obtained or if facts were true regardless of whether careers could be ruined, families traduced and lives destroyed? A Yes. Q Would your editorial policy be the following? If it sounds right, it probably is right so lob it in. A Yes. Wendy Burrell Cleansing cycle Q What is your role in life? A To cleanse the world of its stains and restore its original freshness. Q Would you describe yourself as a religious leader? A I can only work with the fabric of humanity as I find it. I follow after the event. Q Is there a spiritual element to your work? A Warmth and that necessary solution dissolving the detritus we accumulate and carry through the day. Release, revival, restoration with integrity: I offer what I can. Q How would you describe your motivation? A Proud to be part of the ongoing cycle of purification and renewal, the purging of the clinging past; proud to go deep, to work out the marks and signatures of daily grind. D A Prince Regular servicing Q How important is connectivity? A Essential for intergenerational continuity, and nice to get lucky on Friday night. Q Frequency? A Determinants include stimulus-response programming, component fatigue, Sunday afternoon weather and what’s on the box. Q Duration? A Constraints of time and environment must be considered, ie, five minutes or all day upstairs to play with, so to speak. Q Standard or deviation? A Affirmative on successful docking, indicated by audible signal, triggers infinite choice software, and there’s lots of ideas in “The Joy of Connectivity”. Q Maintenance? A Regular servicing at intervals suggested by the manual and checked by qualified personnel. WD-40 recommended, specially for squeaky bed-springs! Derek Morgan |
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