I've been pandemic-rewatching Person of Interest. It's really quite shocking how much more relevant it feels today compared to when it aired just a few years ago.
It's fun looking at things like GPT-3 and imagining how they could be used to build the surveillance AI at the heart of Person of Interest.
(If you haven't watched Person of Interest yet, here's my pitch for it: it's a CBS procedural where the hook is that an engineer built a secret, surveillance feed tracking AI for the government after 9/11 - but he cared about civil liberties, so he built it as an impenetrable black box. All it does is kick out the SSN of someone who is about to be either the victim or the perpetrator of a terrorist attack - which means government agents still have to investigate what's going on rather than taking the AI's word for it. "The Machine" also sees victims/perpetrators of violent crimes - but the government don't care about those. Finch, the machine's inventor, does - so he fakes his own death, hooks into a backdoor into the machine that gives him those SSNs and sets up a private vigilante squad to help stop the violent crimes from happening. So that gives you the "case of the week". Only it's actually an extremely deep piece of philosophical science fiction disguised as a case-of-the-week procedural, and as time goes on the plots become much more about AI, the machine, attempts to build rival machines, AI ethics and so on. It's the best fictional version of AI I've ever seen. The creative team later worked on Westworld.)
I honestly don't think the show has much to do with AI at all and is more like a retelling of the Greek classics in a sci-fi wrapping, which is actually something that comes up in the show at several points excplicitly.
The AIs in the show very quickly turn into godlike characters with antropomorphic personalities and the real world issues of AI such as surveillance, economics and so on are all dealt with in very shallow fashion. I had the same issues with Westworld too. It turns from an AI premise into a classical Christian morality tale very fast. ("we need to suffer to become conscious").
One of the things I loved about the show is that different characters have different philosophies concerning AI, and they argue about them. Nathan v.s. Fitch. Fitch vs. Root. Control, Greer - for the most part the show tried to give some depth and background to their thinking around the implications of what they were responsible for.
Way smarter than you would expect from a CBS procedural!
It's fun looking at things like GPT-3 and imagining how they could be used to build the surveillance AI at the heart of Person of Interest.
(If you haven't watched Person of Interest yet, here's my pitch for it: it's a CBS procedural where the hook is that an engineer built a secret, surveillance feed tracking AI for the government after 9/11 - but he cared about civil liberties, so he built it as an impenetrable black box. All it does is kick out the SSN of someone who is about to be either the victim or the perpetrator of a terrorist attack - which means government agents still have to investigate what's going on rather than taking the AI's word for it. "The Machine" also sees victims/perpetrators of violent crimes - but the government don't care about those. Finch, the machine's inventor, does - so he fakes his own death, hooks into a backdoor into the machine that gives him those SSNs and sets up a private vigilante squad to help stop the violent crimes from happening. So that gives you the "case of the week". Only it's actually an extremely deep piece of philosophical science fiction disguised as a case-of-the-week procedural, and as time goes on the plots become much more about AI, the machine, attempts to build rival machines, AI ethics and so on. It's the best fictional version of AI I've ever seen. The creative team later worked on Westworld.)