One Million Plausible New Words Created...
-
Aaye deytre ap orgis votemnow faz reelots sisk 2003 blasher. Regardz Colin J Davies
*** WARNING *
This could be addictive
**The minion's version of "Catch :bob: "It's a real shame that people as stupid as you can work out how to use a computer. said by Christian Graus in the Soapbox
ColinDavies wrote: Aaye deytre ap orgis votemnow faz reelots sisk 2003 blasher. :laugh::doh: Later, JoeSox "Your theory is crazy, but is it crazy enough to be true?" -- Niels Bohr joeswammi.com ↔ humanaiproject.org ↔ joeswammi.com/sinfest
-
old news but still interesting, imo "An advanced form of artificial intelligence has captured the zen of the typical English word and produced a copyrighted compendium of over a million unique word stems. From this listing will inevitably arise thousands of new web domain, product, service, and corporate names. Stop and think for a moment… If pressed to do so, how would you generate torrents of new potential words that may be easily pronounced and make contact with our implicit concept of the English word? …It would not be accurate to say that the proverbial “they” can do it. They can’t and they haven’t, but Imagination Engines, Inc. (IEI) has. Over a one month period, an artificial neural network system has built itself into a ‘linguistic brain’ at the IEI laboratory in St. Louis, MO and autonomously read gigabytes worth of Internet content, thereby capturing the zen of the typical English word. This system was then allowed to daydream new potential functional English words that fit the mold of accepted vocabulary. The result is a collection of over 1 million unique word stems whose number may be rapidly expanded to between 10 and 100 million, through the addition of standard prefixes, suffixes, as well as various case and tense endings. From this listing will inevitably arise thousands of new web domain, product, service, and corporate names. This linguistic feat was accomplished using IEI’s patented Creativity Machine® Paradigm (US Patent 5,659,666), a form of synthetic intelligence that has already produced nationally advertised products, composed 11,000 copyrighted melodies, and generated the formulas of nearly one million new potential chemical systems. The power of this inventive technology has now been demonstrated once again, as this newest generation of artificial intelligence has cut an extremely wide swath through all the words that are to be…" http://www.prweb.com/releases/2002/5/prweb39059.php[^] Later, JoeSox "Your theory is crazy, but is it crazy enough to be true?" -- Niels Bohr joeswammi.com ↔ humanaiproject.org ↔ joeswammi.com/sinfest
Can the grnetaeed wrdos siltl be raablede eevn if the lteerts in the wrdos are scabrmeld, peseirvnrg jsut the frsit and the lsat oens? Trying to make bits uncopyable is like trying to make water not wet. -- Bruce Schneier By the way, dog_spawn isn't a nickname - it is my name with an underscore instead of a space. -- dog_spawn
-
old news but still interesting, imo "An advanced form of artificial intelligence has captured the zen of the typical English word and produced a copyrighted compendium of over a million unique word stems. From this listing will inevitably arise thousands of new web domain, product, service, and corporate names. Stop and think for a moment… If pressed to do so, how would you generate torrents of new potential words that may be easily pronounced and make contact with our implicit concept of the English word? …It would not be accurate to say that the proverbial “they” can do it. They can’t and they haven’t, but Imagination Engines, Inc. (IEI) has. Over a one month period, an artificial neural network system has built itself into a ‘linguistic brain’ at the IEI laboratory in St. Louis, MO and autonomously read gigabytes worth of Internet content, thereby capturing the zen of the typical English word. This system was then allowed to daydream new potential functional English words that fit the mold of accepted vocabulary. The result is a collection of over 1 million unique word stems whose number may be rapidly expanded to between 10 and 100 million, through the addition of standard prefixes, suffixes, as well as various case and tense endings. From this listing will inevitably arise thousands of new web domain, product, service, and corporate names. This linguistic feat was accomplished using IEI’s patented Creativity Machine® Paradigm (US Patent 5,659,666), a form of synthetic intelligence that has already produced nationally advertised products, composed 11,000 copyrighted melodies, and generated the formulas of nearly one million new potential chemical systems. The power of this inventive technology has now been demonstrated once again, as this newest generation of artificial intelligence has cut an extremely wide swath through all the words that are to be…" http://www.prweb.com/releases/2002/5/prweb39059.php[^] Later, JoeSox "Your theory is crazy, but is it crazy enough to be true?" -- Niels Bohr joeswammi.com ↔ humanaiproject.org ↔ joeswammi.com/sinfest
So, essentially they created no value and copyrighted a million terms that may at some time be product names in the hope of extorting money from companies and individuals that are in-fact creating value. To me, this embodies the worst of capitalism. :( The underlying technology, to me at least, seems trivial. David
-
So, essentially they created no value and copyrighted a million terms that may at some time be product names in the hope of extorting money from companies and individuals that are in-fact creating value. To me, this embodies the worst of capitalism. :( The underlying technology, to me at least, seems trivial. David
David Cunningham wrote: To me, this embodies the worst of capitalism. The underlying technology, to me at least, seems trivial. Yes, this is the way I feel also. I currently classify it as someone having an immoral American Dream. Much like someone tried to trademark that phrase that one of the 9/11 airplane guy said to his wife on the phone. sorry, forgot the specific details:sigh: Later, JoeSox "Your theory is crazy, but is it crazy enough to be true?" -- Niels Bohr joeswammi.com ↔ humanaiproject.org ↔ joeswammi.com/sinfest
-
old news but still interesting, imo "An advanced form of artificial intelligence has captured the zen of the typical English word and produced a copyrighted compendium of over a million unique word stems. From this listing will inevitably arise thousands of new web domain, product, service, and corporate names. Stop and think for a moment… If pressed to do so, how would you generate torrents of new potential words that may be easily pronounced and make contact with our implicit concept of the English word? …It would not be accurate to say that the proverbial “they” can do it. They can’t and they haven’t, but Imagination Engines, Inc. (IEI) has. Over a one month period, an artificial neural network system has built itself into a ‘linguistic brain’ at the IEI laboratory in St. Louis, MO and autonomously read gigabytes worth of Internet content, thereby capturing the zen of the typical English word. This system was then allowed to daydream new potential functional English words that fit the mold of accepted vocabulary. The result is a collection of over 1 million unique word stems whose number may be rapidly expanded to between 10 and 100 million, through the addition of standard prefixes, suffixes, as well as various case and tense endings. From this listing will inevitably arise thousands of new web domain, product, service, and corporate names. This linguistic feat was accomplished using IEI’s patented Creativity Machine® Paradigm (US Patent 5,659,666), a form of synthetic intelligence that has already produced nationally advertised products, composed 11,000 copyrighted melodies, and generated the formulas of nearly one million new potential chemical systems. The power of this inventive technology has now been demonstrated once again, as this newest generation of artificial intelligence has cut an extremely wide swath through all the words that are to be…" http://www.prweb.com/releases/2002/5/prweb39059.php[^] Later, JoeSox "Your theory is crazy, but is it crazy enough to be true?" -- Niels Bohr joeswammi.com ↔ humanaiproject.org ↔ joeswammi.com/sinfest
Isn't this just a rich man's version of the Dissociated Press Algorithm[^]? -- Ian Darling "The moral of the story is that with a contrived example, you can prove anything." - Joel Spolsky
-
old news but still interesting, imo "An advanced form of artificial intelligence has captured the zen of the typical English word and produced a copyrighted compendium of over a million unique word stems. From this listing will inevitably arise thousands of new web domain, product, service, and corporate names. Stop and think for a moment… If pressed to do so, how would you generate torrents of new potential words that may be easily pronounced and make contact with our implicit concept of the English word? …It would not be accurate to say that the proverbial “they” can do it. They can’t and they haven’t, but Imagination Engines, Inc. (IEI) has. Over a one month period, an artificial neural network system has built itself into a ‘linguistic brain’ at the IEI laboratory in St. Louis, MO and autonomously read gigabytes worth of Internet content, thereby capturing the zen of the typical English word. This system was then allowed to daydream new potential functional English words that fit the mold of accepted vocabulary. The result is a collection of over 1 million unique word stems whose number may be rapidly expanded to between 10 and 100 million, through the addition of standard prefixes, suffixes, as well as various case and tense endings. From this listing will inevitably arise thousands of new web domain, product, service, and corporate names. This linguistic feat was accomplished using IEI’s patented Creativity Machine® Paradigm (US Patent 5,659,666), a form of synthetic intelligence that has already produced nationally advertised products, composed 11,000 copyrighted melodies, and generated the formulas of nearly one million new potential chemical systems. The power of this inventive technology has now been demonstrated once again, as this newest generation of artificial intelligence has cut an extremely wide swath through all the words that are to be…" http://www.prweb.com/releases/2002/5/prweb39059.php[^] Later, JoeSox "Your theory is crazy, but is it crazy enough to be true?" -- Niels Bohr joeswammi.com ↔ humanaiproject.org ↔ joeswammi.com/sinfest
Oh joy of joys, they scoured the world wide web, a bastion of good literature if there ever was one, for "accepted vocabulary". We accept LOL, AFAIK, bitches, wicked, leet, blog, "to google" and a host of other words on the net because it is a loose and informal medium. Using it, as it is, as a lexicon may be unwise. I am with David here. regards, Paul Watson Bluegrass South Africa Brian Welsch wrote: "blah blah blah, maybe a potato?" while translating my Afrikaans. Crikey! ain't life grand?
-
David Cunningham wrote: To me, this embodies the worst of capitalism. The underlying technology, to me at least, seems trivial. Yes, this is the way I feel also. I currently classify it as someone having an immoral American Dream. Much like someone tried to trademark that phrase that one of the 9/11 airplane guy said to his wife on the phone. sorry, forgot the specific details:sigh: Later, JoeSox "Your theory is crazy, but is it crazy enough to be true?" -- Niels Bohr joeswammi.com ↔ humanaiproject.org ↔ joeswammi.com/sinfest
I thought they only copyrighted the entire work. It wouldn't stop anyone from using any of the words in that "book" unless someone else had already used that word in a competing product or company.
-
old news but still interesting, imo "An advanced form of artificial intelligence has captured the zen of the typical English word and produced a copyrighted compendium of over a million unique word stems. From this listing will inevitably arise thousands of new web domain, product, service, and corporate names. Stop and think for a moment… If pressed to do so, how would you generate torrents of new potential words that may be easily pronounced and make contact with our implicit concept of the English word? …It would not be accurate to say that the proverbial “they” can do it. They can’t and they haven’t, but Imagination Engines, Inc. (IEI) has. Over a one month period, an artificial neural network system has built itself into a ‘linguistic brain’ at the IEI laboratory in St. Louis, MO and autonomously read gigabytes worth of Internet content, thereby capturing the zen of the typical English word. This system was then allowed to daydream new potential functional English words that fit the mold of accepted vocabulary. The result is a collection of over 1 million unique word stems whose number may be rapidly expanded to between 10 and 100 million, through the addition of standard prefixes, suffixes, as well as various case and tense endings. From this listing will inevitably arise thousands of new web domain, product, service, and corporate names. This linguistic feat was accomplished using IEI’s patented Creativity Machine® Paradigm (US Patent 5,659,666), a form of synthetic intelligence that has already produced nationally advertised products, composed 11,000 copyrighted melodies, and generated the formulas of nearly one million new potential chemical systems. The power of this inventive technology has now been demonstrated once again, as this newest generation of artificial intelligence has cut an extremely wide swath through all the words that are to be…" http://www.prweb.com/releases/2002/5/prweb39059.php[^] Later, JoeSox "Your theory is crazy, but is it crazy enough to be true?" -- Niels Bohr joeswammi.com ↔ humanaiproject.org ↔ joeswammi.com/sinfest
They had better not have the word "ferf" in there!!!!!!!
-
So, essentially they created no value and copyrighted a million terms that may at some time be product names in the hope of extorting money from companies and individuals that are in-fact creating value. To me, this embodies the worst of capitalism. :( The underlying technology, to me at least, seems trivial. David
David Cunningham wrote: To me, this embodies the worst of capitalism. The underlying technology, to me at least, seems trivial. Agreed. Regardz Colin J Davies
*** WARNING *
This could be addictive
**The minion's version of "Catch :bob: "It's a real shame that people as stupid as you can work out how to use a computer. said by Christian Graus in the Soapbox
-
Oh joy of joys, they scoured the world wide web, a bastion of good literature if there ever was one, for "accepted vocabulary". We accept LOL, AFAIK, bitches, wicked, leet, blog, "to google" and a host of other words on the net because it is a loose and informal medium. Using it, as it is, as a lexicon may be unwise. I am with David here. regards, Paul Watson Bluegrass South Africa Brian Welsch wrote: "blah blah blah, maybe a potato?" while translating my Afrikaans. Crikey! ain't life grand?
-
David Cunningham wrote: To me, this embodies the worst of capitalism. The underlying technology, to me at least, seems trivial. Yes, this is the way I feel also. I currently classify it as someone having an immoral American Dream. Much like someone tried to trademark that phrase that one of the 9/11 airplane guy said to his wife on the phone. sorry, forgot the specific details:sigh: Later, JoeSox "Your theory is crazy, but is it crazy enough to be true?" -- Niels Bohr joeswammi.com ↔ humanaiproject.org ↔ joeswammi.com/sinfest
JoeSox wrote: forgot the specific details The phrase is "Let's Roll". I'm not entirely sure why she wanted to copyright it except to prevent other people from using it and making a buck off it. ------------------------------------------ The ousted but stubbornly non-dead leader reportedly released an audiotape this weekend, ending by calling on Iraqis to, quote, "resist the occupation in any way you can, from writing on walls, to boycotting, to demonstrating and taking up arms." adding, "you know, pretty much anything I used to kill you for." - The Daily Show
-
JoeSox wrote: forgot the specific details The phrase is "Let's Roll". I'm not entirely sure why she wanted to copyright it except to prevent other people from using it and making a buck off it. ------------------------------------------ The ousted but stubbornly non-dead leader reportedly released an audiotape this weekend, ending by calling on Iraqis to, quote, "resist the occupation in any way you can, from writing on walls, to boycotting, to demonstrating and taking up arms." adding, "you know, pretty much anything I used to kill you for." - The Daily Show
Brit wrote: The phrase is "Let's Roll". I'm not entirely sure why she wanted to copyright it except to prevent other people from using it and making a buck off it. That's right, I remember now, and you are correct, because some loser was trying to capitalize on it. It forced her to try and copyright it. Later, JoeSox "Your theory is crazy, but is it crazy enough to be true?" -- Niels Bohr joeswammi.com ↔ humanaiproject.org ↔ joeswammi.com/sinfest