• Survey says most Gen Z-er

    From Mike Powell@1:2320/105 to All on Thu May 22 16:04:00 2025
    Survey says most Gen Z-ers would marry an AI, but I've got more faith in Gen
    Z -- and AI should stay in the friend zone

    Date:
    Thu, 22 May 2025 16:15:22 +0000

    Description:
    An AI companion service's new survey says Gen Z would be okay with an AI marriage -- but that's ridiculous, right?

    FULL STORY ======================================================================

    AI-lationships is the gag-inducing term Joi AI cooked up to support its
    recent eye-opening survey on human-to-AI relationships. In it, eight out of
    10 Gen Z respondents said they would consider marrying an AI partner.

    Before we delve too much into this mind-bending stat, let's look at the
    source. Joi AI, formerly EVA AI, is a premium online AI companion service
    that offers a wide range of AI companion personalities, complete with AI-generated imagery that can be, depending on settings and what you pay,
    NSFW.

    It's kind of a cheesy service that caters mostly, I think, to lonely men.
    Now, don't get me wrong; I know there's a growing epidemic of loneliness. A recent Harvard study found that 21% of US adults report some level of loneliness (some studies suggest the number is far higher ).

    Disconnection

    Remote work, screen time, and other things that take us away from direct
    human connection are probably not helping this trend, but AI has increasingly stepped into the connection void with a growing army of voice chatbots that
    can carry on surprisingly realistic and even empathetic-sounding
    conversations.

    And this is by design. Earlier this month, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg, whose company is building powerful AI models, suggested we should all have AI
    friends .

    Marriage, then, is perhaps, the next logical extension.

    The concept of deep, personal relationships between humans and artificial intelligence traces back to well before we had Gemini Live , ChatGPT ,
    Copilot , and others ready and willing to converse with us at length. The
    2013 movie Her was built around the idea of a deeply personal (and
    concerning) relationship between Joaquin Phoenix's character and Scarlett Johansson's disembodied AI voice long before we could talk to a single AI in real life.

    I've had my share of AI conversations, and I find them entertaining and,
    often, illuminating . I don't see them as personal, though. Perhaps that's because I'm not lonely. The more desperate you are for human connection, the more AI companionship might seem like a reasonable substitute.

    But marriage? Meet-cute in the cloud

    At least Joi AI adds static imagery to the playful banter you'll find through its AI partners, but that's the exception and not the rule. Most generative
    AI chatbots are just voices and undulating screens. You need images and, ultimately, touch to make a genuine connection... don't you?

    As I write this, I'm reminded that I met my wife through a phone call and
    that I was enchanted, initially, by nothing but her voice and wit. But to
    build our relationship and eventual union, we did date in person. Being with her sealed the deal and made me want to marry her.

    I don't understand why Joi AI's respondents, even Generation Z, who are much more deeply immersed in technology, social media, and AI than any generation before it, would accept an AI as a life mate. In the survey, though, they do sound primed for AI connection, with 83% saying they "could build a deep emotional bond with an AI partner."

    One expert I spoke to via email, Dr. Sue Varma , a board-certified
    psychiatrist and author of Practical Optimism , put it in perspective for me. "At our core, we all want the same things: to be seen, to be heard, and to
    feel valued not judged or criticized. For Gen Z, that longing is especially strong, and the loneliness theyre experiencing is very real. What they want, what we all want, is meaningful, mutual human connection."

    Would you consider marrying an AI?

    Unconvinced that Joi AI's data points to a real trend (I did ask them for survey details and have yet to receive a response), I ran a couple of
    anecdotal surveys on X (formerly Twitter) and Threads . Across both, less
    than 10% said yes, they would consider marrying an AI, roughly a third said
    no on Threads, and the vast majority wondered if I was okay.

    As preposterous as I find the whole idea of AI relationships and eventual marriage, I also understand that we're at the start of a revolution. AI's ability to mimic human language and even emotions is growing exponentially,
    and there's already growing concern about human-to-AI relationships .

    "Technologyand AI in particularisnt going away. Its going to keep evolving,
    and yes, it may offer relationships that seem easy, even comforting. Think of the always-affirming AI: the hype person, the yes-person, the one that never challenges us and always tells us what we want to hear. Its seductive. But
    its not real," said Dr. Varma , and added, "What we really need to be doing
    is using AI to support our humanity, not replace it."

    The latest Gemini and ChatGPT models provide incredibly human- and expressive-sounding conversations. Some believe AIs have already beat the Turing test (basically when a computer's response is indistinguishable from a human's, at least as perceived by another human).

    We will, in this decade, see humanoid robots equipped with these AIs, and that's when things will get really weird. How long before some dude is
    marrying his AI bot in Vegas?

    Joi AI's self-serving survey is ridiculous on the face of it, even if it is also a harbinger of AI relationships to come -- and I hope Gen Z swipes left
    on the whole idea.

    ======================================================================
    Link to news story: https://www.techradar.com/computing/artificial-intelligence/survey-says-most-g en-z-would-marry-an-ai-but-ive-got-more-faith-in-gen-z-and-ai-should-stay-in-t he-friend-zone

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  • From August Abolins@1:396/45.29 to Mike Powell on Thu May 22 22:43:00 2025
    Hello Mike Powell!

    ** On Thursday 22.05.25 - 16:04, Mike Powell wrote to All:

    The latest Gemini and ChatGPT models provide incredibly
    human- and expressive-sounding conversations. Some believe
    AIs have already beat the Turing test (basically when a
    computer's response is indistinguishable from a human's,
    at least as perceived by another human).

    From https://www.livescience.com/technology/artificial- intelligence/what-is-the-turing-test

    "While the Turing test might be held as a benchmark for AI
    systems to surpass, Eleanor Watson, an expert in AI ethics and
    member of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
    (IEEE),told Live Science that "The Turing Test is becoming
    increasingly obsolete as a meaningful benchmark for artificial
    intelligence (AI) capability."

    "Watson explained that LLMs are evolving from simply mimicking
    humans to being agentic systems that are able to autonomously
    pursue goals via programming "scaffolding" - similar to how
    human brains build new functions as information flows through
    layers of neurons.

    "These systems can engage in complex reasoning, generate
    content creation and assist in scientific discovery. However,
    the real challenge isn't whether AI can fool humans in
    conversation, but whether it can develop genuine common sense,
    reasoning and goal alignment that matches human values and
    intentions," Watson said. "Without this deeper alignment,
    passing the Turing Test becomes merely a sophisticated form of
    mimicry rather than true intelligence."

    "Essentially, the Turing test may be assessing the wrong things
    for modern AI systems.
    --
    ../|ug

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  • From Mike Powell@1:2320/105 to AUGUST ABOLINS on Fri May 23 07:24:00 2025
    However,
    the real challenge isn't whether AI can fool humans in
    conversation, but whether it can develop genuine common sense,
    reasoning and goal alignment that matches human values and
    intentions," Watson said. "Without this deeper alignment,
    passing the Turing Test becomes merely a sophisticated form of
    mimicry rather than true intelligence."

    This. There have already been some instances where AI has been caught following its own intentions vs. those of humanity. But, alas, they still
    keep pursuing it.

    Mike


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