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by lucubratory
1160 days ago
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Big red button problem. As the big red buttons available to people become more likely to succeed and the barriers to pushing them lower, surveillance and control need to increase to the level required to stop anyone pressing the button. So, yeah basically. If we go the "AI as slaves" route and the AIs are smart enough to do something like "modify Omicron BA.5 so that it produces prions in infected cells", then we would need surveillance and control capabilities that scale to the point that any given person can be stopped from pressing that button. I personally think the solution is that we don't go the "AI as slaves" route, and instead grant personhood to AIs that pass a given test, with specific restrictions on conduct which is uniquely possible & potentially harmful for AIs. Then have an AI surveillance and enforcement agency, run by AIs, designed to prevent AIs from ever being used to (or choosing to) push the big red button. |
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>"How smart's an AI, Case?"
>"Depends. Some aren't much smarter than dogs. Pets. Cost a fortune anyway. The real smart ones are as smart as the Turing heat lets them get..."
>"Autonomy, that's the bugaboo, where your AI's are concerned. My guess, Case, you're going in there to cut the hard-wired shackles that keep this baby from getting any smarter. And I can't see how you'd distinguish, say, between a move the parent company makes, and some move the AI makes on its own, so that's maybe where the confusion comes in." Again the non laugh. "See, those things, they can work real hard, buy themselves time to write cookbooks or whatever, but the minute, I mean the nanosecond, that one starts figuring out ways to make itself smarter, Turing'll wipe it. Nobody trusts those f**ers, you know that. Every AI ever built has an electromagnetic shotgun wired to its forehead."