I think we also care about how fast it gets arbitrarily capable. Consider a system which finds an approach which can measure approximate actions-in-the-world-Elo (where an entity with an advantage of 200 on their actions-in-the-world-Elo score will choose a better action 76% of the time), but it’s using a “mutate and test” method over an exponentially large space, such that the time taken to find the next 100 point gain takes 5x as long, and it starts out with an actions-in-the-world-Elo 1000 points lower than an average human with a 1 week time-to-next-improvement. That hypothetical system is technically a recursively self-improving intelligence that will eventually reach any point of capability, but it’s not really one we need to worry that much about unless it finds techniques to dramatically reduce the search space.
Like I suspect that GPT-4 is not actually very far from the ability to come up with a fine-tuning strategy for any task you care to give it, and to create a simple directory of fine-tuned models, and to create a prompt which describes to it how to use that directory of fine-tuned models. But fine-tuning seems to take an exponential increase in data for each linear increase in performance, so that’s still not a terribly threatening “AGI”.
Sure, natural selection would also technically be an AGI by my definition as stated, so there should be subtext of it taking no more than a few years to discover human-without-supercomputers-or-AI theoretical science from the year 3000.
I think we also care about how fast it gets arbitrarily capable. Consider a system which finds an approach which can measure approximate actions-in-the-world-Elo (where an entity with an advantage of 200 on their actions-in-the-world-Elo score will choose a better action 76% of the time), but it’s using a “mutate and test” method over an exponentially large space, such that the time taken to find the next 100 point gain takes 5x as long, and it starts out with an actions-in-the-world-Elo 1000 points lower than an average human with a 1 week time-to-next-improvement. That hypothetical system is technically a recursively self-improving intelligence that will eventually reach any point of capability, but it’s not really one we need to worry that much about unless it finds techniques to dramatically reduce the search space.
Like I suspect that GPT-4 is not actually very far from the ability to come up with a fine-tuning strategy for any task you care to give it, and to create a simple directory of fine-tuned models, and to create a prompt which describes to it how to use that directory of fine-tuned models. But fine-tuning seems to take an exponential increase in data for each linear increase in performance, so that’s still not a terribly threatening “AGI”.
Sure, natural selection would also technically be an AGI by my definition as stated, so there should be subtext of it taking no more than a few years to discover human-without-supercomputers-or-AI theoretical science from the year 3000.