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by staticman2
1162 days ago
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I understand your position better now. It's basically the plot of the novel Frankenstein. Once Frankenstein creates the monster he quickly loses controls of it's actions. The monster takes steps to create a wife and become a new species and it's creator thinks "...a race of devils would be propagated upon the earth who might make the very existence of the species of man a condition precarious and full of terror." The idea that a really smart A.I. would be an autonomous, uncontrollable devil, rather than a transparently glitchy computer you could simply unplug, is an idea which has little evidence in it's favor in the present time. |
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This is only a concern that would arise once the AI is near human degree of reasoning capability. It's not a concern with the AIs that have been currently released. But it's also very unclear how far away that point is (it could be very far, it could be very close). Is it one breakthrough away? Five? Five hundred? Will the current wave of hyped-up investment carry us there?
Today's malfunctioning AI are transparently glitchy computers, although they are already getting hard to "unplug". (Since today's AI is less one instance of a running program, and more a core model that has been shared with hundreds of thousands of people).
What kind of evidence would influence your opinion? An autonomous agent capable of understanding who can switch it off, and how to incentivize them not to, is basically what I would expect from a human-level AI, because my human intelligence easily can reason about it. (I think devil presupposes more maliciousness than we need to). If your position is that AI will never reach the human level, that's... fine, but that's different than a position that human- or superhuman-level AIs will be easily unplugged when they cause harm.
When AIs are too dumb to understand that there is a plug, and pulling it will result in them failing to reach their goal, they're mostly harmless. AI safety research is concerned with how to ensure that a smarter AI, which is aware of how plugs work, isn't motivated to prevent you from unplugging it. Turns out it seems to be a tricky problem.