You might expect an artificial brain made up of 16,000 computers to have rather more sophisticated interests.
But when Google let its latest cyber brain loose on the internet, it did what many humans would do when looking for some light entertainment it honed in on cats.
And while it may seem a frivolous activity to you and me, the scientists say it is in fact a major breakthrough.
In the past, humans have 'supervised' the process by which such computers identify objects by labelling certain features to give the machine a reference point.
But in the latest experiment, at Google's secretive X laboratory in Mountain View, California, the computer brain was given no help at all.