![]() Humphrys, M., 2001b, Distributing a mind on the Internet: the world-wide-mind, Proceedings of the 6th European Conference on Artificial Life (ECAL-01), Springer. Humphrys, M., 2001a, The Internet in the 1980s, /˜humphrys/. This web page has 3 sub-pages: MGonz – The LISP source code, MGonzNet – The REXX source code, and The DRAKE conversation. ![]() Humphrys, M., 1995, How my program passed the Turing Test, /˜humphrys/ eliza.html. M., 1995, Turing test considered harmful, Proceedings of the International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence (IJCAI-95): 972–977, Montreal. Keywordsĭoris, T., 1998, MGonz version online as CGI script, formerly at: We conclude with some speculation that the future of all of AI is on the Internet, and a description of the “World- Wide-Mind” project that aims to bring this about. It seems to have been the first (a) AI real-time chat program, which (b) had the element of surprise, and (c) was on the Internet. This was certainly one of the first AI programs online. What was also novel was the onlineelement. Most chatbots exist in an environment where people expectto find some bots among the humans. The element of surprise was also crucial. This chatbot succeeded due to profanity, relentless aggression, prurient queries about the user, and implying that they were a liar when they responded. This is the first time this event has been properly written. The conversations this program had can be seen – depending on how one defines the rules (and how seriously one takes the idea of the test itself) – as a passing of the Turing Test. ![]() In 1989, the author put an ELIZA-like chatbot on the Internet. ![]()
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