We have SAGI: Stupid Artificial General Intelligence. It's actually quite general, but works differently. In some areas it can be better or faster than a human, and in others it's more stupid.
Just like an airplane doesn't work exactly like a bird, but both can fly.
I was 12-13 at the time. When I started programming it seemed really difficult. I didn't have access to the Internet back then.
But I saw it like me against the machine. Since I was youn I wanted to be an inventor. This tool allowed anyone to "invent" any software coming out of the inventor's imagination. It just required a computer, and the inventor not giving up and using his brain. I could do that. I liked the challenge.
Be a tinkerer, have fun! Discover things on your own. Dare to be stupid and do whatever stupid thing feels right. You don't need to follow some pre-programmed plan.
Programming is all about problem solving. You solve one problem, good. Now you will have another problem. No one guarantees you will solve it nor how much effort it will require specifically for you to solve it. And maybe it's the wrong problem to solve. But you will end up figuring all that out, and then you will feel accomplished and willingly hunt the next problem.
1. At what point an intelligence trained with copyrighted work is derivative work of the trained materials?
2. Why making a difference between AI and HI (Human Intelligence)?
3. Given the fast development in the field, when does the difference made above (if any) start being outdated and unrealistic and how do we future-proof against this?
Instead of long learning or long contexts, at some point artificial neural networks will have to transition to continuous/online learning - learn while using the network. This way, limitations are broken like they are in our minds.
Similar to what Numenta HTM networks do, but scalable and performant for real use cases.
BTW, perhaps human-like conscience emerge as a "self-attention-like" mechanism between context and learning. Just saying.
Just like an airplane doesn't work exactly like a bird, but both can fly.