Artificial intelligence (AI) solutions have already become a significant part of our lives. Like it or not, we use it to unlock our smartphones - who recognizes our fingerprints? We also hear that AI is involved in the diagnosis of various diseases. Smart AI is encroaching on our jobs as well - packers and operators are being successfully replaced by robots. We live in the dawn of self-driving cars. What's next? Maybe DI will take the exams for us, or maybe create movie scripts? Your home library doesn't have it yet, but on the Internet you can find AI-created books or music samples, painted pictures, scripts for advertising. What's next? Maybe poets and playwrights will no longer have to exhaust their gray cells, and after entering a few keywords, they will be able to sign new works later? Maybe AI will be able to recreate the poetry of William Shakespeare or the drama of ancient authors? Probably driven by this question and eager for an experiment, Latvian actor and playwright Kārlis Krūmiņš tested the GPT-3 (Generative Prie-trained Transformer) artificial language module developed by the company OpenAI (not to mention that it is a product of Elon Musk), capable of generating text that is almost indistinguishable from a human. created text. After several months of trying to talk to the machine, the artist already had a play in his hands. Well, knowing that the machine is able to read 4 thousand. pages per minute, the scratch process took only human error! The human-creator-AI collaboration has taken on flesh, a play that spawned the play The Frankenstein Complex. If you ask what this play is about, we answer: about how DI sees us. It's like participating in a study where you have to distinguish between human and AI creation. In any case, the performance is not an innocent technological toy and after it ends you want to be alone and look at one point or at the night sky.
The play features two Latvian and two NKDT actors who communicate in English, as it is the language they can use to communicate with the AI system and with each other, and the audience is also offered Lithuanian subtitles.