Roko believed that the probability was much higher
All I know about what Roko believed about the probability is that (1) he used the word “might” just as I did and (2) he wrote “And even if you only think that the probability of this happening is 1%, …” suggesting that (a) he himself probably thought it was higher and (b) he thought it was somewhat reasonable to estimate it at 1%. So I’m standing by my “might” and robustly deny your claim that writing “might” was strawmanning.
if you don’t want AIs to be utilitarian
If you’re standing in front of me with a gun and telling me that you have done some calculations suggesting that on balance the world would be a happier place without me in it, then I would probably prefer you not to be utilitarian. This has essentially nothing to do with whether I think utilitarianism produces correct answers. (If I have a lot of faith in your reasoning and am sufficiently strong-minded then I might instead decide that you ought to shoot me. But my likely failure to do so merely indicates typical human self-interest.)
The important part is the practical consequences for how we should build AI.
Perhaps so, in which case calling the argument “a case against utilitarianism” is simply incorrect.
Roko’s argument implies the AI will torture. The probability you think his argument is correct is a different matter. Roko was just saying that “if you think there is a 1% chance that my argument is correct”, not “if my argument is correct, there is a 1% chance the AI will torture.”
This really isn’t important though. The point is, if an AI has some likelihood of torturing you, you shouldn’t want it to be built. You can call that self-interest, but that’s admitting you don’t really want utilitarianism to begin with. Which is the point.
Anyway this is just steel-manning Roko’s argument. I think the issue is with acausal trade, not utilitarianism. And that seems to be the issue most people have with it.
All I know about what Roko believed about the probability is that (1) he used the word “might” just as I did and (2) he wrote “And even if you only think that the probability of this happening is 1%, …” suggesting that (a) he himself probably thought it was higher and (b) he thought it was somewhat reasonable to estimate it at 1%. So I’m standing by my “might” and robustly deny your claim that writing “might” was strawmanning.
If you’re standing in front of me with a gun and telling me that you have done some calculations suggesting that on balance the world would be a happier place without me in it, then I would probably prefer you not to be utilitarian. This has essentially nothing to do with whether I think utilitarianism produces correct answers. (If I have a lot of faith in your reasoning and am sufficiently strong-minded then I might instead decide that you ought to shoot me. But my likely failure to do so merely indicates typical human self-interest.)
Perhaps so, in which case calling the argument “a case against utilitarianism” is simply incorrect.
Roko’s argument implies the AI will torture. The probability you think his argument is correct is a different matter. Roko was just saying that “if you think there is a 1% chance that my argument is correct”, not “if my argument is correct, there is a 1% chance the AI will torture.”
This really isn’t important though. The point is, if an AI has some likelihood of torturing you, you shouldn’t want it to be built. You can call that self-interest, but that’s admitting you don’t really want utilitarianism to begin with. Which is the point.
Anyway this is just steel-manning Roko’s argument. I think the issue is with acausal trade, not utilitarianism. And that seems to be the issue most people have with it.