It is. I was going for a sense of unpredictable that is independent of us - of our knowledge. Such a thing would have to be established mathematically, but I don't know if it would be possible to achieve.
I agree. The other hard part is knowing if we are using the right mathematics.
Maybe a different way of coming at it is the whole P vs. NP thing and the idea of reversible processes. For example, there isn't a general algorithm for factoring a number into primes ... at least not one other than guessing and verifying, and guessing isn't really a process. So maybe in that sense a net trained to factor numbers (which is something people try to do) is unpredictable.
This certainly isn't my specialty, but I thought there were aspects of quantum computing that are looking at cracking prime numbers since they are such a vital part of encryption. It would seem to operate in a different manner than semiconductor chips in that the "question" causes a collapse of a wave function, and out pops your answer. I could be completely wrong in how quantum computing works, but that is the impression I get from my limited reading.
Also, if there is anything that we could categorize as unpredictable, it would be quantum events.
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