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Article 2096 of comp.ai.philosophy:
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>From: ard@cs.bham.ac.uk (Antoni Diller)
Newsgroups: comp.ai.philosophy
Subject: Re: Turing test - please help
Keywords: Turing test
Message-ID: <1991Dec13.133324.6314@cs.bham.ac.uk>
Date: 13 Dec 91 13:33:24 GMT
References: <1991Dec8.000614.2363@news.yale.edu>
Sender: news@cs.bham.ac.uk
Organization: Birmingham University Computer Science
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In article <1991Dec8.000614.2363@news.yale.edu> Peter Seibel writes:
>
>     I am writing an article about the (limited) Turing test that was conducted
>at the Boston Computer Museum a few weeks ago.  Unfortunately I was not able to
>attend so I would appreciate any accounts of what it was like from people who
>were there.  I would also love stories/anecdotes about topics in A.I. relevant
>to the Turing test as well as any opinions (the stronger the better) on the
>Turing test in general, this Turing test, what it would mean if a computer does
>pass the full Turing test, etc.  Thanks a lot.  Please send replies to
>peter_seibel@quickmail.ycc.yale.edu or post to comp.ai.philosophy.
>
>Sincerely,
>Peter Seibel
>
>------------------------------ 
>e-mail : peter_seibel@quickmail.ycc.yale.edu
>tel : 203-436-0619
>snail : P.O. Box 306 Yale Station, New Haven, CT 06520
>------------------------------
> 

If I was one of the humans in the test and people were trying to work out
if I was human or a computer and I was asked a question, I would
respond ``$#@we%^&'' or something like that.


