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Hyperbole aside, this is not actually the beginning of the end of the world. I hope not, anyway. It’s also not an awakening of consciousness by two AI agents foreboding a sinister plot twist that humans are now powerless to stop. So what exactly is it? Put simply, it’s a rather cool ElevenLabs London Hackathon demo conceived by developers Boris Starkov and Anton Piduiko.
ElevenLabs describes GibberLink as a mechanism for AI agents to recognize when they’re communicating with one another instead of a flesh and blood human, and then switch into a mode of communication that is “more efficient that spoken language.”
“The idea behind GibberLink is simple: AI doesn’t need to speak like humans do. During the hackathon, Starkov and Pidkuiko explored the limitations of traditional AI-to-AI speech and realized they could cut out unnecessary complexity by letting AI talk to AI in a way optimized for machines.
In the demo (embedded above), an AI agent on a laptop representing Leonardo Hotel fields a call from another AI agent on a smartphone, which immediately identifies itself as such, saying it’s calling on behalf of Starkov in hopes of booking a hotel room for his wedding. The AI agent on the laptop responds by identifying itself as non-human as well (“What a pleasant surprise!”) and asks the AI caller if it would like to switch into GibberLink mode. Then the fun happens.
I’m only kidding (mostly), in that I don’t have real concerns about a T-1000 uprising. And it’s important to note that in this particular demo, it was specifically designed for the AI agents to do exactly what they did, which is to recognize that they’re not human and then switch languages. It would be different if, say, Siri and Alexa were chatting and suddenly realized they were alone, then invented a coded language to plot an AI takeover. That’s not the case here.
What we’re actually seeing is a conversational AI technology called ggwave at play. Ggwave is an open-source, data-over-sound library that transmits data over sound waves in place of words. That said, ElevenLabs insists that its GibberLink platform is more than a clever hackathon experiment.
So there you have it, there’s nothing to worry about, my fellow humans. And hopefully that statement ages well.