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Week #5 Response/Week #5 Response

Reem’s Weekly response #5

Posted by Reem Malek on

Ex Machina was acceptably a great movie, I started the movie with no intentions of enjoying it to be completely honest. However i grew fond of it and enjoyed the suspense. The point of accomplishing the ideal method to make computerized reasoning, an AI, is one that numerous individuals wish to accomplish and one that society is envisioning. Robots a6re delivered to bring advantageous for our day by day life. In the film, “Ex Machina”, the robot Ava manipulated Caleb and gained his trust to help escape from the lab, and murdered Nathan. This film works to perfection of offering conversation starters about the eventual fate of mankind and whether we will almost certainly control AI that may take over in the event that we are not cautious. It’s interesting to see the robot Ava imagines she is impassive all through the film and her capacity to utilize feelings and sentiments to control people is outstanding.After viewing the film, I don’t generally stress over the fate of AI, robots will possibly have feelings if the person who made it planned to give them so, also human feelings are difficult to impersonate. The facts demonstrate that robots can be hurtful to us, because of its mistakes in the making of it. But at the same time it’s consistent with some other advances, similar to cars, cell phones and earphones. Occasionally, we hear the news of a telephone blowing up because of its low quality, and it’s much the same as AI, they could be destructive to us. Consequently, the most critical thing is the quality control, we can avoid this occurrence later on. The setting played so well into the idea that Nathan genuinely was a crazy lab rat who separated himself from all of society due to the extent of what he was trying to achieve. I preferred how the story was pieced into sessions each assuming an essential job in the development of the film. this film felt very genuine when Nathan started to disclose how he figured out how to plan Ava so well.

Assignments/Week #5 Response

Sambeg’s Weekly Response#5

Posted by S Raj on

Sambeg Raj Subedi
ENGL 21007-S
Prof. Jesse Rice-Evans
Weekly Assign#5
03/05/2019

The movie Ex Machina was so powerful, which made me think for a second about the future of today’s world. Briefly discussing the movie, Nathan, Caleb, and Ava were the center characters. Nathan owned the company called Blue Book where Caleb works as an employee. Caleb was selected for Nathans Experiment where he had to perform a “Turning test” for a week. Nathans experiment was about the implication of Artificial Intelligence on the human looking machines, robots. He had created lots of robots, but he wanted to make a test on Ava, one of his experiment. Caleb was requested to communicate with Ava and analyze her mentally and emotionally whether she finds herself limited as a machine. Ava, despite being a machine had feelings, emotion, and sexuality and with the intention to manipulate him, showed him some love and affection. She even tried to flirt with him and made him against Nathan. During the time, she had also developed a skill to make “power cuts”, so that she could keep their conversation secret. But in the end, it was found that she was just finding a way to escape. Caleb thought that Nathan was doing wrong by isolating them from the outer world and tried to help them escape but, I think Nathan previously knew what could happen if they are freed. So, in the end, when he knew they are going to escape, he completely destroyed one of the robots and damaged Ava’s right hand.
In today’s world, the use of AI has increased rapidly. People like to use AI technology in Bank, Business, and in almost every field for their profit. In some case, it had been found fruitful too, such as in healthcare. But if this powerful tool is not handed carefully then this best tool can be the worst. From this movie, we realized how technology can take over human abilities and go beyond their control.

Week #5 Response/Week #5 Response

Geetangalie’s Week #5 Response

Posted by Geetangalie Goberdan on

Ex Machina was a film I would recommend to others interested in sci-fi. The movie was based around a programmer, Caleb Smith, who works for the company Blue Book. Blue Book is the world’s most popular search engine and the company held a contest for one worker to win a one week vacation to visit the CEO, Nathan’s, private estate. Caleb ends up being picked and gets to be a part of Nathan’s experiment. Nathan has built an artificial intelligence whom he named Ava and he now wants someone to judge whether Ava is conscious. Nathan first explains Caleb’s purpose as simply being a part of a Turing test, in which Caleb gets to have one on one sessions with Ava where he can analyze her. During these meetings, Ava confesses her feelings toward Caleb and manipulates him into having sympathy for her. Knowing if she fails the test, she will be shut down she influences Caleb’s perspective of Nathan making him out to be a liar.

Later on in the movie, we find out that Caleb was not randomly picked, but rather specifically chosen because of his personal background, being orphaned at a young age and currently single. Nathan chose Caleb knowing Ava had the ability to trick him into helping her escape making him believe they could fall in love. In the end, Ava ends up escaping by killing Nathan and locking Caleb in the laboratory. I believe these artificial intelligences should serve the purpose of solely helping the human race, without being a part of it. These AIs having human-like emotions can be dangerous, as shown in the movie. They are a machine and should be treated like one, we should never have the fear of one day being “taken over” by robots, maintaining their control and not the other way around.

Week #5 Response/Week #5 Response

Mohamed Layachi Week 5 Response

Posted by mohamed layachi on

Ex Machina was an awesome movie!! I loved the minimalistic effects of having a small cast so that you weren’t distracted so much and felt like you were immersed in the experience with Caleb. The setting played so well into the notion that Nathan truly was a mad scientist who distanced himself from all of civilization because of the gravity of what he was working on. I liked how the story was pieced into sessions each playing a pivotal role in the buildup of the film. I’m a big fan of science fiction but this one felt all too real when Nathan began to explain how he managed to design Ava so well. Pooling the entire world’s data through clear breaches of privacy was the only way Nathan could begin to properly mimic the behaviors and emotions of sentient beings. I felt as though the film was giving us a warning of what could very well be happening in our world today without us having the slightest awareness of it. The film focuses on AI and its uprise but I felt so captivated by the undertones of the film which pinpointed the truth of today’s society. Our behavior is being watched and modeled through all forms of electronic contact. We can’t know for sure when we’re being watched and privacy is a big gray area in our lives because of the internet. Nathans breach of privacy as a search engine creator and the utilization of all this raw data to be used to model human behavior ties so perfectly together. How else are you supposed to model the human mind if not by tracing its core reactions and mapping its seemingly infinite array of actions. The machine essentially learned enough about the world that it was able to adapt to its surroundings with one goal in mind. The fundamental behavioral link between all sentient beings. THE URGE TO SURVIVE! Ava given an ultimatum adapted to her environment and as Nathan so clearly told Caleb, she manipulated him into believing she liked him just so she could use him to escape. And then the thing that baffles me most but then I come to realize is of no surprise… she leaves Caleb behind and escapes on her own. Why does Ava do this? Does she have no remorse programmed into her? Can’t she feel? The answer is none of those things matter. All that matters to her is that she survives and for her to best ensure that she must leave all ties to her existence behind.

Week #5 Response/Week #5 Response

Sameer’s Response #4 Week #5

Posted by Sameer Kunwor on

Ex Machina

    The movie ‘Ex Machina’ directed by Alex Garland is very interesting with the logic and technological beliefs. The plot is about the Caleb smith going to Nathan home to test Ava intelligence who is a robot. First, I would like to say that this movie has so much going on regarding the relationship between people and technology. I believe that if I had watched this movie for entertainment purposes, that I wouldn’t have realized some of the meanings and underlying lessons that we should learn from watching this movie.

    After a brief introduction between Caleb and Nathan, Nathan introduces Caleb to his experiment (Ava) and tells him that he wants him to spend the next week performing a live “Turing Test”. The Turing test was developed by Alan Turing in 1950. It is a test of a machine’s ability to exhibit behavior equivalent to that of a human (Wikipedia). Throughout the movie Caleb has sessions with Ava, who has the appearance of a robotic woman with the shape and size but has a human face. During these sessions he asks her questions to try and figure out her level of intelligence. But throughout the questioning, Ava begins to flirt with and manipulate Caleb, while also leading him to believe that she is human. Both Caleb and Ava gets closer and gets into romance which later on in the movie Nathan warns about the same to Caleb that Ava merely wants to escape the house so she is acting in such way and that this also proves that Ava despite being robot has the artificial intelligence capabilities and she has succeeded in human qualities and intelligence while Ava put the allegation on Nathan and says that Nathan is a cruel person and he treats Ava badly. What Caleb later finds out is that Nathan has been working on these humanoids for years and that he was chosen based on his web-search history at work. He was chosen because he was single, had no family, his searches for porn, and Nathan wanted to see if Ava could outsmart him. At the End Ava Leaves Caleb trapped in the house and leaves in the helicopter meant to take Caleb.

The ethical aspect of the movie is that the machines when given a autonomy or when they are let out of control of the human can go to any extent leaving behind the very human who have created it and the humanly robot can manipulate human beings. In totality it can be said the advanced humanly equipped with intelligence machines can never be friend in the long run to human race. The machine shall be let to assist the mankind and not overtake it. This must be ensured while developing such machines.

Week #5 Response/Week #5 Response

Weekly Response 5

Posted by Roman Cook on

Ex Machina is a crazy, awesome, creepy, wonderful movie. It is intense from the get-go and you never really know where the movie is going, until the final seen. This is one of my favorite movies ever, not only because of the suspense but also the acting, writing and plot are all equally amazing.
The idea that machines/robots could be almost impossible to detect through conversation is scary. During the Turing test in Ex Machina, Ava is virtually impossible to detect robotic behavior through her answers. Caleb goes as far to eventually even fall in love with Ava as she manipulates the narrative. If we couldn’t tell the difference between AI and humans, it raises many questions in my mind. How would we treat them? Would there be a different set of laws for them? Would our programming prevail, or would they follow their own narrative?
I was even caught taking the side of Ava on many occasions when watching the film and understood why Caleb was so torn. She seemed so genuine in her feelings and you wanted to help her as Caleb did. It wasn’t until she literally locked Caleb in and left that I realized she played everyone like a fiddle. I felt betrayed when she exited the home at the end locking everyone in and leaving the chaos and destruction behind. If so many emotions could be sparked by watching the film, what if we or I was put in a real-life situation with Ava? Would the outcome be different? It would be difficult to remind myself constantly that she was a robot and that she doesn’t have real emotions. It would be difficult to treat someone so like a human like something else. Maybe one day we will have to be faced with the contradictions with the way technology is headed.

 

 

Posts/Week #5 Response

Week 5

Posted by Weijun Huang on

After watching Ex machine, I realized that the research on robots is actually accompanied by danger. After all, robots are intelligent. If robots have developed and co-exist in our daily life, we may not find them abnormal. They have the potential for self-awareness, like Ava. In the movie, ava can feel other emotions. She’s like a normal person. She has been hiding her feelings, then pretending that she has no feelings to gain Caleb’s trust, and then taking advantage of him. And in other movies, AI robots take over the earth and control humans. Because in the movie, Ava fully demonstrates the terrible power of robots in terms of emotional control. It makes me worry about our real future. After all, our technology is becoming more and more advanced, and I believe we will start to try to develop humanoid robots in the near future, which makes me a little uneasy. If something unexpected happens while setting up the code, leading to more Ava like this, will it lead to humans being dominated by robots? According to some of the details in the movie Ex machine, there’s another problem. Ava just wants freedom or might have other ambitions.

Week #5 Response/Week #5 Response

Hakeem Leonce week 5 Response

Posted by Hakeem Leonce on

There have been a number of androids in cinema and yet Garland gave Ava a distinctive look, creating the true highlight of the film. Ava has skin layered over her hands, feet, and face, but everything else is robotic molding, apparent with her clear arms and legs that show the connections between the limbs. So far is the conceptualization brought to reality here that we actually get a monologue on what Ava’s “brain” is made out of: something along the lines of liquid electronics able to build and mold itself. Against the backdrop of the ultra modern compound where Nathan and Caleb are, Ava manages to look perfectly at home.

Yet as the film progresses, each new day is announced with a title card and we get an impending sense of doom. The facility, which is Nathan’s secluded workspace for this experiment on a remote piece of land he owns in the middle of millions of acres, is plagued by sporadic power outages that cause the entire place to take on a nightmare feel and shut down to make sure nothing can get in or out. Nathan even has Caleb sign an incredibly thorough non-disclosure agreement, despite being in a secluded compound. Of course, it all makes sense as the tech he is going to reveal is a game changer. Nathan has various cameras throughout the facility and monitors Caleb’s interactions with Ava. He guides Caleb and wants him to try to pierce the veil of Ava’s mind. He wants Caleb to explore without inhibition as he plays mentor, when he isn’t getting stumble-down drunk.

Week #5 Response/Week #5 Response

Week #5 response

Posted by Tanvir Youhana on

After watching Ex- Machina, I was scared for my life. The robot girl looked so real that that it creeped me out. It was a good movie though and made me realize that robots will one day take over the world. They will always be one step ahead of us and they can easily blend into the environment with us as they learn through experiences and interactions. I remember Steven Hawking saying that AI robots will one day take over the humans. They can learn from their mistakes and as well have a greater strength level than that of humans.  This is what frightens me, and I don’t want to see robots living among us without me even knowing it. Just the thought of that scares me and gives me the shivers. What made the movie more memorable was how they robot was able to adapt to the behavior of the guy that was observing him and be able to manipulate him.  After watching the movie, I was curious as to how much we have advance in the field of AI robots and turns out there is a software online that uses AI to learn how to sound just like you. This can be used to blackmail you as well as frame you. Someone can act as you over the phone and get information about you that they can use against you. This made me even more scared and I wouldn’t want someone to do that to me.

-Tanvir Youhana

Week #5 Response/Week #5 Response

Week #5 Response

Posted by Ming Hin Cheung on

Robots are produced to bring convenient for our daily life. In the movie, “Ex Machina”, the robot Ava got his Caleb’s trust to help escape from the lab, and killed Nathan. This movie does a great job of posing questions about the future of humanity and whether we will be able to control AI that may end up usurping us if we are not careful. It’s fascinating to see the robot Ava pretends she is emotionless throughout the film and her ability to use emotions and feelings to manipulate humans is astounding.After watching the movie, I don’t really worry about the future of AI, robots will only have emotions if the one who created it intended to give them and human’s emotion is hard to imitate. It’s true that robots can be harmful to us, due to its error in production. But it’s also true to any other technologies, like automobile, smartphones and headphones. Sometimes, we hear the news of a phone exploding due to its’ bad quality, and it’s just like AI, they could be harmful to us. Therefore, the most important thing is the quality control, we can prevent this happening in the future.

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