I’d like to hear more about how the boundaries framework can be applied to Resistance from AI Labs to yield new insights or at least a more convenient framework. More concretely, I’m not exactly sure which boundaries you refer to here:
There are many reasons why individual institutions might not take it on as their job to make the whole world safe, but I posit that a major contributing factor is that sense that it would violate a lot of boundaries.
My main issue is I for now agree with Noosphere89′s comment: the main reason is just commonsense “not willing to sacrifice profit”. And this can certainly be conceptualized as “not willing to cross certain boundaries” (extralimiting the objectives of a usual business, reallocating boundaries of internal organization, etc.), but I don’t see how these can shed any more light than the already commonsense considerations.
To be clear, I know you discuss this in more depth in your posts on pivotal acts / processes, but I’m curious as to how explicitly applying the boundaries framework could clarify things.
I’d like to hear more about how the boundaries framework can be applied to Resistance from AI Labs to yield new insights or at least a more convenient framework. More concretely, I’m not exactly sure which boundaries you refer to here:
My main issue is I for now agree with Noosphere89′s comment: the main reason is just commonsense “not willing to sacrifice profit”. And this can certainly be conceptualized as “not willing to cross certain boundaries” (extralimiting the objectives of a usual business, reallocating boundaries of internal organization, etc.), but I don’t see how these can shed any more light than the already commonsense considerations.
To be clear, I know you discuss this in more depth in your posts on pivotal acts / processes, but I’m curious as to how explicitly applying the boundaries framework could clarify things.