|
|
|
|
|
by Nevermark
1651 days ago
|
|
Good point. A company is indeed somewhat like an AI, especially if it uses AI. But as long as humans are in the loop, it isn't integrated, and integration is a tremendous advantage. Humans can't update their own algorithms. Can't directly share what they know in fractions of second. Can't be replicated in a fraction of a second. Can't scale up brain power in seconds or less. But - you are still correct. If the owners of a corporation are ok with it replacing all the human workers, then complete integration can still be achieved. Wether an AI is owned by an individual, a corporation, or self-owned, the owner is the id for the AI. The risks and motivations in any of these cases are really the same, with human owners only possibly introducing morals beyond what the environment requires, or other "inefficiencies". |
|
We don't have any evidence AIs could do this either. Computers are not magic.
> Humans can't update their own algorithms.
This is the exact task your education has proved is possible. Companies update their policies to paper-clip maximize all the time. They react to environment stimulus and increase in sophistication over time.
"Complete Integration" seems like an artificial criteria you are creating as a "desperate post-rationalization to avoid the realization the singularity is long past and the rapture of the nerds left almost all of us behind."