|
|
|
|
|
by heyitsguay
2347 days ago
|
|
We hear that opinion all the time. As someone working in neural net-based computer vision I'd basically agree that the current approaches are tending towards a non-AGI local maximum, but I'd note that as compared to the 80s, this is an economically productive local maximum, which will likely help fuel new developments more efficiently than in previous waves. The next breakthrough may be made by someone academically untrained, but you can bet they'll have learned a whole lot of math, computer science, data science, and maybe neuroscience first. |
|
I'd contend that, for the most part, it doesn't matter. It's a bit like the whole ML vs AGI debate ("but ML is just curve fitting, it's not real intelligence"). The more pertinent question for human society is the impact it has - positive or negative. ML, with all its real or perceived weaknesses, is having a significant impact on the economy specifically and society generally.
It'll be little consolation for white collar workers who lose their jobs that the bot replacing them isn't "properly intelligent". Equally, few people using Siri to control their room temperature or satnav will care that the underlying "intelligence" isn't as clever as we like to think we are.
Maybe current approaches will prove to have a cliff-edge limitation like previous AI approaches did. That will be interesting from a scientific progress perspective. But even in its current state, contemporary ML has plently scope to bring about massive changes in society (and already is). We should be careful not to miss that in criticising current limitations.