“Pet”, “vermin”, and “wild animal” (as well as “livestock” and “working animal”) are all concepts that humans have come up with for our species’ relationships with other species that we’ve been living with since forever, and have developed both instincts and cultural practices to relate to. Why would you expect them to apply to an AI’s relationship to humans? Isn’t that a bit, well, anthropomorphizing?
Indeed it is, a bit. This is just an analogy meant to convey that humans aren’t likely to stop a foomed AI (or maybe a group of them, if such a term will even make sense) from doing what it wants, just like animals are powerless to stop determined humans.
“Pet”, “vermin”, and “wild animal” (as well as “livestock” and “working animal”) are all concepts that humans have come up with for our species’ relationships with other species that we’ve been living with since forever, and have developed both instincts and cultural practices to relate to. Why would you expect them to apply to an AI’s relationship to humans? Isn’t that a bit, well, anthropomorphizing?
Indeed it is, a bit. This is just an analogy meant to convey that humans aren’t likely to stop a foomed AI (or maybe a group of them, if such a term will even make sense) from doing what it wants, just like animals are powerless to stop determined humans.