Firstly, let me confirm the final of the 2018 Loebner Prize will be in the expected format, 4 half hour rounds with 4 finalists, 4 confederates and 4 judges. LPP2 will be used.
Having said that, I should also clarify that I don’t think we’ll be able to run the Loebner Prize as it is currently understood any more. This isn’t the end and it may be a good thing leading to a much stronger and more active community.
The main problems are thus:
1) Hugh Loebner promised to update his will to leave his estate to the AISB purely for the purpose of running the competition, that will was never located. No one in the AISB suspects malice on Hugh’s part.
2) The competition would always have benefited from sponsorship, but now it absolutely requires it, and the simple fact is that the competition in its current state, and current location, is a difficult sell to sponsors.
3) Certain aspects of the competition take a lot of time to organise and exclude many people for reasons that are not relevant, for example, the size limits, offline-only rule, and the “20 questions” selection process.
4) The “finals” day also ensures only a small number of the submissions get to be demonstrated in public, where a more open structure would reward relative newcomers, and diversify the crowd.
There may be more but I’m writing this off the cuff as I feel this discussion should have started earlier.
Everyone in the Loebner Prize organising committee respects and values the regular entrants, and the chatbots.org community, so we want to keep you all involved and content with the way we take the competition. Let me briefly describe my vision for 2019.
I would like for the AISB to make an open invitation to all software and robotics teams to submit anything which behaves in a quintessentially human way, for example: a chatbot, poetry generator, graphic artist, music composer, imitation-game player. All submissions which meet a quite attainable quality standard will be displayed and demonstrated in an exhibition somewhere more accessible than Bletchley Park, space permitting. Funds will be available to help exhibitors attend with their submission, e.g. travel awards, and computers for pure software submissions. A panel of judges will be selected each year from industry, academia and the media to award a number of prizes to the submissions they deem to be of a particularly high standard, I don’t know what the prizes will be but we can guarantee that one of the prizes will be “The Loebner Prize” for best chatbot.
There is nothing stopping us doing the conventional judge-chatbot-confederate conversations at the exhibition, and as it will be more of a collaborative event we can be much less formal in the selection, security, and restrictions, on chatbots.
This will turn the current stressful finals day into a more of a celebration, where we will not be limited to demonstrating only the best four chatbots, where more of the community will be able to attend and will have more reason to attend, and there will be greater exposure to the public and media.
I hope you agree this is a good direction to go in the face of an existential crisis of the Loebner Prize. I’m comforted by the fact that I know the community here will give me their honest opinion on the matter.