Note that some of the best arguments are of the shape “AI will cause doom because it’s not that hard to build the following...” followed by insights about how to build an AI that causes doom. Those arguments are best rederived privately rather than shared publicly, and by asking publicly you’re filtering the strength of arguments you might get exposed to.
I note that if software developers used that logic for thinking about software security, I expect that almost all software in the security-by-obscurity world would have many holes that would be considered actual negligence in the world we live in.
Note that some of the best arguments are of the shape “AI will cause doom because it’s not that hard to build the following...” followed by insights about how to build an AI that causes doom. Those arguments are best rederived privately rather than shared publicly, and by asking publicly you’re filtering the strength of arguments you might get exposed to.
I note that if software developers used that logic for thinking about software security, I expect that almost all software in the security-by-obscurity world would have many holes that would be considered actual negligence in the world we live in.
Is there a better way of discovering strong arguments for a non-expert than asking for them publicly?
Strong arguments of this kind? I sure hope not, that’d make it easier for more people to find insights for how to build an AI that causes doom.