ChatGPT passed the Turing Test. Now what?
ChatGPT passed the Turing Test. The AI fooled 73% of people into thinking it was human, raising new questions about machine intelligence. As artificial intelligence gets better and better, people face machines that look--and act--surprisingly human. Breakthroughs, discoveries, and DIY tips sent every weekday. It seems that every day brings a new headline about the burgeoning capabilities of large language models (LLMs) like ChatGPT and Google's Gemini--headlines that are either exciting or increasingly apocalyptic, depending on one's point of view. One particularly striking story arrived earlier this year: a paper that described how an LLM had passed the Turing Test, an experiment devised in the 1950s by computer science pioneer Alan Turing to determine whether machine intelligence could be distinguished from that of a human. The LLM in question was ChatGPT 4.5, and the paper found that it had been strikingly successful in fooling people into thinking it was human: In an experiment where participants were asked to choose whether the chatbot or an actual human was the real person, nearly three of the four chose the former.
Sep-15-2025, 13:00:00 GMT
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