Hi All,
I ran across this letter to the editors of Salon.com, by Hugh Loebner just after “the fiasco of 2002” in Atlanta. The 2002 Loebner prize contest, for those who weren’t around then, was an incredible kerfuffle*, credited to me on the internet by my then employer, Neil Bishop, who insisted that I have no dealings with the contest because I would be “prejudiced.” Given that I was the only person involved who knew anything about the contest, Hugh never seemed to blame me for it. We met for lunch together in Atlanta in July, a few months before the contest. The subject was never breached. Instead, Hugh gave me a copy of his patent for a method of giving a tip to the waiter at a restaurant. (I still have it.)
He seemed to revel in the controversy that resulted from the mismanagement of the contest, and the fact that a Salon writer wrote about him. Puzzled the hell out of me for years, and then I met him in 2005, at the Guilford colloquium in 2005. We had breakfast together, and met later for (lunch?) dinner. He was gracious, and entertaining. The subject of 2002 never came up, thankfully to me, and I gained respect for him in an odd, Father Ted, sort of way.
In 2003, he wrote a letter to Salon.com which they published. In it, he said, “To those readers who claim that the Turing Test is not a good measure of intelligence I would reply that it is one measure of intelligence. I have no objections, philosophical, moral, or personal to other measures or tests. It is just that I have an interest in the Turing Test, not the other tests. If the Turing Test shows an entity to be “intelligent” but the others don’t, or vice versa, we may have a problem. On the other hand, I think it likely that any computer entity that passes a Turing Test will likely do quite well on other measures of intelligence also. It will be interesting to see if this is so.
To those readers who claim that the Turing Test is a valid measure of intelligence, but that the Loebner Prize contest is not a good Turing Test, I ask “why not?” In what manner is the Loebner Prize contest, as currently held, different from the exercise that Turing described? Note that the horrible rule that conversations have to be restricted has been removed.” - Hugh Loebner, Letter to Salon.com, 2003.
I join our fellows in anxiously waiting to hear about the finalists for 2014 at Bletchley.
Robby.
* Sorry, Robby. Had to do a minor edit - Dave