Yeah, I don’t understand why safety should equal ‘stop working on the thing’. If anything, AI friendliness will further the advancement of AI, allowing a more widespread use.
Yeah, I don’t understand why safety should equal ‘stop working on the thing’.
There is a good chance that if the first super-intelligent AI isn’t carefully designed to be friendly it will destroy us, but creating a friendly super-intelligent AI is much harder than merely creating an AI, so our species only chance of survival is to go very slow with AI development until we have put a lot more resources into researching friendliness. Imagine that it was 1850 and you knew that the crash of a single airplane would destroy mankind, but you couldn’t convince others of this. You would be scared if people started to work on creating airplanes.
I get that, but I think that “working to make a plane a lot safer” would still tick the box “working on a plane project”. I would say this is even what happens in reality, otherwise you could just strap a jet engine under a bus. I am all in favor of slowing down AI work to better focus on safety, and I would contest Zuckerberg telling him: “you know Mark, even if we are focusing on AI safety that doesn’t mean we are slowing down progress on AI, if anything, we are accelerating it.”
Yeah, I don’t understand why safety should equal ‘stop working on the thing’. If anything, AI friendliness will further the advancement of AI, allowing a more widespread use.
There is a good chance that if the first super-intelligent AI isn’t carefully designed to be friendly it will destroy us, but creating a friendly super-intelligent AI is much harder than merely creating an AI, so our species only chance of survival is to go very slow with AI development until we have put a lot more resources into researching friendliness. Imagine that it was 1850 and you knew that the crash of a single airplane would destroy mankind, but you couldn’t convince others of this. You would be scared if people started to work on creating airplanes.
I get that, but I think that “working to make a plane a lot safer” would still tick the box “working on a plane project”. I would say this is even what happens in reality, otherwise you could just strap a jet engine under a bus.
I am all in favor of slowing down AI work to better focus on safety, and I would contest Zuckerberg telling him: “you know Mark, even if we are focusing on AI safety that doesn’t mean we are slowing down progress on AI, if anything, we are accelerating it.”