you’re missing all the possibilities of a ‘merely human-level’ AI. It can be parallelized, scaled up and down (both in instances and parameters), ultra-reliable, immortal, consistently improved by new training datasets, low-latency, ultimately amortizes to zero capital investment
I agree this post could benefit from discussing the advantages of silicon-based intelligence, thanks for bringing them up. I’d add that (scaled up versions of current) ML systems have disadvantages compared to humans, such as a lacking actuators and being cumbersome to fine-tune. Not to speak of the switching cost of moving from an economy based on humans to one based on ML systems. I’m not disputing that a human-level model could be transformative in years or decades—I just argue that it may not be in the short-term.
I agree this post could benefit from discussing the advantages of silicon-based intelligence, thanks for bringing them up. I’d add that (scaled up versions of current) ML systems have disadvantages compared to humans, such as a lacking actuators and being cumbersome to fine-tune. Not to speak of the switching cost of moving from an economy based on humans to one based on ML systems. I’m not disputing that a human-level model could be transformative in years or decades—I just argue that it may not be in the short-term.