The history of AI is the history of jewish grifters.
In the late 1950s, ((( Frank Rosenblatt ))) at the Office of Naval Research led development of the Perceptron. This was a simple single-layer classifier implemented as an analog computer connected to a 20x20 pixel image sensor.
Rosenblatt claimed that the Perceptron was AGI, and made many exaggerated claims about it, such as that it would soon exceed human image recognition abilities, and that scaling up the perceptron architecture alone (more units of the same single-layer design) would overcome all practical limitations.
Rosenblatt ignored theoretical limits (e.g., single-layer perceptrons CANNOT represent nonlinearly separable functions like XOR), and practical issues such as noise. This led to a backlash and the well known critique by Marvin Minsky & Seymour Papert in 1969 that slowed AI research for decades.
Just one year later, ((( Minsky ))) and his colleagues at MIT's CSAIL were claiming that within “three to eight years we will have a machine with the general intelligence of an average human being.”
They touted rule-based approaches such as expert systems (think Akinator), and forecast widespread job automation and the rise of whole new industries within a short time.
These inflated expectations were criticized by the Lighthill report in 1973. Lighthill pointed out that AI researchers promised breakthroughs, but produced mostly toy systems that didn't scale to practical problems. They ignored the massive effort needed to encode knowledge, failed to rigorously test on real tasks, and glossed over their limitations. This resulted in a series of massive funding cuts to AI research known as the "AI winter" which the AI jews kvetched about for years.
Now, in the 21st century, the greedy kikes are pulling a bait and switch again with their cheap AI tricks. This time not just for money, but with impossible demands for land, power, water, RAM, hard drives, and jeets. It is quickly becoming clear that jews and their "innovations" simply don't contribute enough to the economy to be worth keeping around.