Excellence at baking cakes is certainly helpful. I agree that there are other cake-experts who might be better poised to predict the future of the cake industry. I don’t know who their analogs are in the case of artificial intelligence. Certainly it seems like AI researchers have access to some important and distinctive information (contra the cake example).
The cake industry is responding to market conditions. Their success depends on the number of buyers.
AI technology advances are quite marketable. The level of R&D investment in AI will depend on the marketability of these advances, on government investment, and on regulation.
It is easier to predict the size of a market than to predict the R&D investment that companies will make to address the market, but there is a relationship.
Military successes may accelerate AI investment, or they may result in periods of disinclination that slow things down.
Nick Bostrum decided to draw an abstract picture. The reader is left on his or her own to find the players in the background. We have to look for their motives. Nobody is interested in HLMI except from universities. Companies want superhuman intelligence as fast as possible for the smallest budget. Any nice-to-have capability, making the AI more human-like, is causing delays and money.
Transparency and regulation are urgently needed. We should discuss it later.
Perhaps people who are a step removed from the actual AI research process? When I say that, I’m thinking of people like Robin Hanson and Nick Bostrom, whose work depends on AI but isn’t explicitly about it.
Excellence at baking cakes is certainly helpful. I agree that there are other cake-experts who might be better poised to predict the future of the cake industry. I don’t know who their analogs are in the case of artificial intelligence. Certainly it seems like AI researchers have access to some important and distinctive information (contra the cake example).
The cake industry is responding to market conditions. Their success depends on the number of buyers.
AI technology advances are quite marketable. The level of R&D investment in AI will depend on the marketability of these advances, on government investment, and on regulation.
Investment levels will matter.
It is easier to predict the size of a market than to predict the R&D investment that companies will make to address the market, but there is a relationship.
Military successes may accelerate AI investment, or they may result in periods of disinclination that slow things down.
Follow the trail of money...
Nick Bostrum decided to draw an abstract picture. The reader is left on his or her own to find the players in the background. We have to look for their motives. Nobody is interested in HLMI except from universities. Companies want superhuman intelligence as fast as possible for the smallest budget. Any nice-to-have capability, making the AI more human-like, is causing delays and money.
Transparency and regulation are urgently needed. We should discuss it later.
Perhaps people who are a step removed from the actual AI research process? When I say that, I’m thinking of people like Robin Hanson and Nick Bostrom, whose work depends on AI but isn’t explicitly about it.