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The Degradation of the Turing Test

This editorial was originally published on Oct 15, 2020. Things have changed a lot in the AI world, so this might be a fun read in 2026 as Steve is on vacation.

The Turing Test from Alan Turing was proposed as a test of an intelligent system. Could a human determine if the other party in a conversation was a machine? This was an interesting way of imagining how powerful a computer might grow and the types of answers it might give to a human. Interestingly enough Turing didn't argue about the correctness of the answers, just that they appeared to be from a human.

In some sense, I wonder how many people would have been fooled by the GPT-3 bot on Reddit. It posted comments for a week to a variety of threads. You can look through the posts by the "thegentlemetre" user, but this one caught my eye, and as I read it, I was surprised how much this looks like things I've seen posted on the Internet.

Is this AI bot intelligent? I don't know, but I do think that the quality of comments and posts on all sorts of threads and articles seems to go down over the years. Maybe it's humans that are becoming worse at online communications rather than computers are getting smarter. Really, I think both things are happening.

AI/ML systems are getting better at mimicking what humans do, and I suspect that in many cases, especially in small samples, they can fool many people, perhaps most. That's disconcerting, especially as I already feel many people are a worse version of themselves online, without feedback and social cues directly available. Having bots add to the volume of poor communications and comments doesn't seem useful to society in general.

While I do think that AI systems can dramatically help us with mundane tasks and tedious work, I also think there can be problems if they become rigid in their actions, without allowing for some flexibility. Humans have discretion, and while they might not use it fairly, or even in ways that their organizations approve of, but they are flexible. Seeing these posts, I wonder if the AIs can learn to be flexible as well. I think they can be.

Steve Jones - SSC Editor

Join the debate, and respond to today's editorial on the forums

 
 Featured Contents
SQLServerCentral Article

SQL ART: Who's Blocking Who? Visualising SQL Server Blocking With Spatial Geometry

Terry Jago from SQLServerCentral

Taking SQL art from shamrocks and Easter eggs to something your DBA manager might actually care about. If you've been following my SQL spatial art series — shamrocks, Easter eggs, Christmas trees — you'll know I have a habit of finding increasingly creative misuses for SQL Server's geometry data type. Most of them have been […]

Technical Article

SQL Saturday Austin 2026

Steve Jones - SSC Editor from SQLServerCentral

SQL Saturday Austin 2026 is coming on Jun 27, 2026. A free day of networking, training, and inspiration. Register today and come spend a day with your peers.

External Article

How data scientists work with PostgreSQL from Python (and how to write queries that don’t break at scale)

Additional Articles from SimpleTalk

In this article, learn how PostgreSQL powers data science workflows, including query execution, performance optimization, indexing, data retrieval, and more.

Blog Post

From the SQL Server Central Blogs - 5 SQL Tricks Worth Remembering Before You Close the Laptop

epivaral from SQL Guatemala

Disclosure: this post may contain links to books as an affiliate link. If you purchase through it, this site may earn a small commission at no extra cost to...

Blog Post

From the SQL Server Central Blogs - Giving AI Agents Visibility Into SQL Server with MCP

aen from Anthony Nocentino Blog

I’ve been thinking a lot lately about what it actually takes to make an AI agent genuinely useful for database work, both for administration and for application access to...

 

 Question of the Day

Today's question (by Steve Jones - SSC Editor):

 

Running SQLCMD II

I run this command to start SQLCMD:
sqlcmd -S localhost -E -c "proceed"
At the prompt, I type this (the 1> and 2> are prompts):
1> select @@version
2> go
What happens?

Think you know the answer? Click here, and find out if you are right.

 

 

 Yesterday's Question of the Day (by Steve Jones - SSC Editor)

Secure Communications

As of June 2026, what is the best version of TLS to use with SQL Server?

Answer: 1.3

Explanation: The current version of TLS is 1.3. Windows 2022 and 2025 support this. Linux supports this by default. Ref:

Discuss this question and answer on the forums

 

 

 

Database Pros Who Need Your Help

Here's a few of the new posts today on the forums. To see more, visit the forums.


SQL Server 2019 - Development
Unable to restrict permission - I have 13 restricted views in my EDW DB. 6 of them are created from DB1 7 of them are created from DB2. Only 1 group should have access to view the data. Rest of the logins shouldn't. No AD group has db_datareader in any of the database. All 3 DBs reside on the same […]
non ascii columns in a utf-8 .txt file - hi, we couldnt get our upstream data source developers to supply what is sometimes chinese and i think sometimes greek symbol (and maybe other non printables) laden city, state/province  columns in english instead.   so for now, we want to fill the columns with blanks if the sql condition i show way below is true.   we […]
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SQL Server 2022 - Administration
PolyBase Trace Flags - Are there any good articles on all the trace flags that are enabled on SQL Server when you install PolyBase? From what I can see most of them are undocumented. which seems a bit odd given Microsoft are forcing these on the environment. These 37 odd trace flags have been added to my client's SQL […]
Replacing Maintenance tasks now using SSMS 22 - what to do with File operations - Unfortunately I'm using SSMS 22. It didn't come with maintenance plans by default. I ran visual studio installer to install the extra components (SSIS, B1 and something else) so I could create tasks. I can now create tasks but cannot see the toolbox to add tasks e.g. backup task. So can only create an empty […]
SQL Server 2022 - Development
Install SQL Scripts via GUI Wizard - Hallo all! My problem is this: I have quite a bunch of TSQL scripts to install several tables, procedures, jobs, etc. into SQL databases. Depending on the local system, some changes (e.g. parameters) have to be made in those scripts. So far, each script has to be installed manually one by one, which is quite […]
 

 

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