Saturday, June 03, 2023

eliza: The game resists the urge to present that idea as an over-the-top-dystopian concept

Is it safer to stick to the sterilized script or at least try to make a real connection? And does tech like this ultimately hurt more than it helps, or vice versa? Eliza doesn’t answer those questions, leaving it for players to chew on. It’s a thoughtful interrogation of modern tech that’s only become more pressing given the emergence of services like Wysa, which are dangerously close to the game’s fictional tech. Whether you’re a supporter of AI tools like ChatGPT or firmly against them, Eliza will provide a thoughtful cautionary tale about the limits of both machines and humans. 

This sci-fi game predicted our current AI landscape four years ago

Skip ahead ". . .There’s a reason all of this especially intrigues me. That’s because of a little visual novel called Eliza. Released in 2019, the indie gem quietly predicted AI’s troubling move into the mental health space. It’s an excellent cautionary tale about the complexities of automating human connection — one that tech entrepreneurs could learn a lot from.

Welcome to Eliza

Set in Seattle, Eliza follows a character named Evelyn Ishino-Aubrey who begins working at a new tech venture created by a fictional, Apple-like megacorporation called Skandha. The company has created a virtual counseling app, called Eliza, that offers AI-guided therapy sessions to users at a relatively affordable price.

Eliza isn’t just a faceless chatbot, though. In order to retain the human element of face-to-face therapy, the app employs human proxies who sit with clients in person and read generated responses from the bot in real time. Skandha claims it has its methodology down to a science, so proxies are forbidden from deviating from the script in any way. They’re simply there to add a tangible face to the advice the machine spits out.

A client sits for a therapy session in Eliza.
Zachtronics

The game resists the urge to present that idea as an over-the-top-dystopian concept. Instead, it opts for a tone grounded in realism, not unlike that of Spike Jonze’s Her. That allows it to ask some serious and nuanced questions about automating human interactions that were ahead of their time. The five-hour story asks if an AI application like that is a net benefit, making something as expensive as therapy more approachable, or simply an exploitive business decision by big tech that trades in human interaction for easy profits.

Players explore those questions through Eliza’s visual novel systems. Interaction is minimal here, with players simply choosing dialogue options for Evelyn. That has a major impact on her sessions, though. Throughout the story, Evelyn meets with a handful of recurring clients subscribed to the service. Some are simply there to monologue about the low-stakes drama in their life, but others are coming to the service with more serious problems. No matter the severity of one’s individual situation, Eliza spits out the same flat script for Evelyn to read, asking some questions that repeat throughout sessions and prescribing breathing exercises and medication.

The more Evelyn gets invested in the lives of her clients, the more she begins to see the limits of the tech. Some of Eliza’s go-to advice isn’t a one-size-fits-all solution to every problem, and more troubled clients begin pleading for real help from an actual human. Players are given the choice to go off script and let Evelyn take matters into her own hands, a move that has some serious implications for both her job and the well-being of her clients.

A tech CEo gives a speech about a wellness app in Eliza.

It isn’t always the right answer. While some of her advice gives clients the help they need, others find themselves spiraling even more. Her words can get twisted around in ways she didn’t expect, something that the safe algorithm of Eliza is built to protect against. 

VIEW FROM WESTERN ANALYSTS: How Russia Is Preparing for Ukraine’s Counteroffensive | WSJ

 

UKRAINE'S "COUNTER-OFFENSIVE" > Zelensky said the counteroffensive was “not a movie”, adding that it is difficult to describe it to the public in advance



"I don’t know how long it will take. To be honest, it can go a variety of ways, completely different. But we are going to do it, and we are ready,” Mr Zelensky said. . .




Russia-Ukraine war latest: Russia changes tactics as counter-offensive looms 

Updated 3 minutes ago

"Russia is targeting key cities and “decision-making centres” in a bid to stop Ukraine’s counter-offensive, Ukraine’s deputy defence minister has said. 
Volodymyr Havrylov said Ukraine has faced repeated volleys of ballistic
missiles last month in the capital Kyiv an urban centres. 

“Their primary goal is to stop our counter-offensive and target decision-making centres,” Mr Havrylov said at Asia’s top security conference, the Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore. 

For Russia “it was a huge surprise to find that the effectiveness of (their ballistic missiles) was almost zero against modern air defence systems, which we received from our partners,” he added. 

Volodymyr Zelensky, the Ukrainian president, announced today that Ukraine is ready to launch its long-awaited counter-offensive that has been delayed while it waits for tanks and weapons from European countries. . ."

Russia-Ukraine war news – latest: 

We are ready for counteroffensive, Zelensky tells Putin

Published .
Story continues > AOL 

David Petraeus: Ukrainians will ‘out-suffer’ Vladimir Putin

The retired general predicts a momentous spring counteroffensive

BY MANA AFSARI
Wednesday, 26
April 2023

Ukrainians will be able to “out-suffer” Vladimir Putin as the war wears on, former director of the CIA and retired army general David Petraeus has said. Speaking at the Bush School of Governance and Public Service in Washington D.C., Petraeus predicted that the spring “counteroffensive” would convince the Russian President to change his approach.

“I believe that’s what’s going to happen,” said Petraeus. “The question, then … is can Putin, over time, be convinced that he will not be able to out-suffer the Ukrainians, the Europeans, and the Americans, which is what he currently thinks.”

Petraeus was discussing an upcoming US-trained Ukrainian offensive against Russian military operations in Crimea at an event on 30th March, the video of which has only just been published. He noted that there are intensive US training, arming, and recruiting efforts to equip Ukrainians for the coming effort in Russian-occupied Melitopol, a southeastern city known as a gateway to Crimea.

“This May, early June, there is going to be a heck of an offensive from the Ukrainians, very likely in the south,” he said. “It probably has to be roughly in the Melitopol area, and they will try to sever the ground line of communications that Russia has established along the southeast coast of Ukraine linking into Crimea.”

  • Petraeus advised that “training centres the US runs in Germany, Grafenwöhr, Hohenfels, UK, Poland, Ukraine itself,” have been preparing “entire new brigades… with new recruits from Ukraine”. 
  • The former CIA director noted that these brigades will execute the upcoming offensive “equipped with Western tanksWestern infantry-fighting vehicles … and Western-wheeled armoured vehicles — really, quite an extraordinary array of systems.”
  • During the talk, Petraeus made clear that the US-trained Ukrainian brigades will have “engineers and EODs to produce obstacles and defuse explosives and mines,” and emphasised the novel Ukrainian capacity to hinder Russian military communications in Crimea, claiming that “they’ll have electronic warfare to jam the Russians’ networks.”

Petraeus expressed broader confidence that Ukrainian forces, with US training and additional reserve forces, would be able to continue offensive and defensive operations for as long as necessary against Russian advances.

Other retired US Army personnel have also commented on the prospective counteroffensive following Petraeus’s remarks. 

  • Lieutenant General Ben Hodges — former commanding general for US Army Europe, former Commander of NATO Allied Land Command, and current NATO Senior Mentor for Logistics — claimed just days ago that Ukraine will aim to retake Crimea, echoing many of the same details regarding armaments, strategy, and regional advances. 
  • Petraeus and Hodges, both retired US generals of different ranks, believe that Ukraine has the capacity to make Russia “bleed” in this counteroffensive.
  •  Leaked US intelligence documents from February suggest that current Biden administration officials are less optimistic about Ukraine’s ability to fully succeed. 

Ukraine's counteroffensive will be 'very impressive' - Gen Petraeus

Gen David Petraeus has said Ukraine’s counteroffensive is “very impressive” and can succeed, adding that the Ukrainians are “determined to liberate their country”.

Petraeus, who was director of the CIA and led international forces in Iraq and Afghanistan before that, has been in Kyiv recently, meeting President Zelenskiy and others.

David Petraeus has said there is strong bipartisan support for continued support for Ukraine.
David Petraeus has said there is strong bipartisan support for continued support for Ukraine. Photograph: Evan Vucci/AP

He spoke about the situation in Ukraine to BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.

On the counteroffensive, he said:I think that this counteroffensive is going to be very impressive.

My sense is that they will achieve combined arms effects in other words, they will successfully carry out combined arms operations where you have

 

  • engineers that are breaching the obstacles and diffusing the minefields and so forth;

 

  • armour following right on through protected by infantry against anti-tank missiles;

 

  • air defence keeping the Russians aircraft off them;

 

  • electronic warfare jamming their radio networks;

 

  • logistics right up behind them; artillery and mortars right out in front of them.

And most important of all … is that as the lead elements inevitably culminate after 72-96 hours, physically that’s about as far as you can go, and they’ll have taken losses … you have follow-on units that will push right on through and capitalise on the progress and maintain the momentum and I think that can get the entire Russian defence in that area moving, then I think you have other opportunities that will open up on the flanks as well.

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