I’ve heard before that an argument against banning AI research (even if you could do such a thing) is that hardware will continue to improve. This is bad because it enables less technically abled parties to weild supercomputer-level AI developments. It’s better that a single company stays ahead in the race than the remote possibility that someone can create a seed-AI in their basement.
I’ve heard before that an argument against banning AI research (even if you could do such a thing) is that hardware will continue to improve. This is bad because it enables less technically abled parties to weild supercomputer-level AI developments. It’s better that a single company stays ahead in the race than the remote possibility that someone can create a seed-AI in their basement.