Okay. I thought that you meant something like that, but this clarified it.
I’m not sure why you think it’s better to build a society of these systems than to build just a single one. It seems to just make things more difficult: instead of trying to make sure that one AI does things right, we need to make sure that the overall dynamic that emerges from a society of interacting AIs does things right. That sounds a lot harder.
1) I am more skeptical of singleton take off. While I think it is possible, I don’t think it is likely that humans will be able to engineer it.
2)Logistics. If identity requires high bandwidth data connections between the two parts it would be easier to have a distributed system.
3) Politics. I doubt politicians will trust anyone to build a giant system to look after the world.
4) Letting the future take care of itself. If the systems do consider the human part of themselves, then they might be better placed to figure out an overarching way to balance everyones needs.
Okay. I thought that you meant something like that, but this clarified it.
I’m not sure why you think it’s better to build a society of these systems than to build just a single one. It seems to just make things more difficult: instead of trying to make sure that one AI does things right, we need to make sure that the overall dynamic that emerges from a society of interacting AIs does things right. That sounds a lot harder.
A few reasons.
1) I am more skeptical of singleton take off. While I think it is possible, I don’t think it is likely that humans will be able to engineer it.
2)Logistics. If identity requires high bandwidth data connections between the two parts it would be easier to have a distributed system.
3) Politics. I doubt politicians will trust anyone to build a giant system to look after the world.
4) Letting the future take care of itself. If the systems do consider the human part of themselves, then they might be better placed to figure out an overarching way to balance everyones needs.