| > Right now, what “safety” seems to mean in practice is, big (mostly American) corporations imposing their ethical judgements on everyone else, whether or not everyone else happens to agree with them. And I’m sceptical it is going to mean anything more than that any time soon. Likewise. As a non-Ami, I don't like these specific ethical judgements being imposed on me, and share your scepticism. It could be much, much worse — but it's still not something I actively like. > Humans radically disagree on fundamental values Agreed. My usual example of this is "murder is wrong", except we don't agree what counts as murder — for some of us this includes abortion, for some of us the death penalty, for some of us meat, and for some of us war. > If advanced AIs have the same value diversity, they’ll have the same irreconcilable differences, which will undermine any attempt by them to coordinate against humanity. Not necessarily. Humans also band together when faced with outside threats, even if we fracture again soon after the threat has passed. Also: the value diversity of "Protestant vs. Catholic" or "Royalist vs. Parliamentarian" in the middle ages did not protect wolves from being hunted to extinction in the UK, and whatever value differences there were between (or within) the Sioux vs. the Ojibwe didn't matter much for the construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline. I therefore think we should try to work on the alignment problem before they become generally as capable as a human, let alone generally more capable: the capabilities are where I think the risk is to be found, as without capability they are no threat; and with capability they are likely to impose whatever "ethics" (or non-anthropomorphised equivalent) they happen to have, regardless of if those "ethics" are something we engineered deliberately or if it's a wildly un-human default from optimising some reward function and becoming a de-facto utility monster: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Utility_monster > If we enforce an ethical monoculture (based on a particular dominant value system) on AIs, which is what a lot of this “safety” stuff actually about, that removes that safety protection. I agree that monocultures are bad. I agree that there is a risk of a brittle partial solution to safety and alignment if the work is done on the mistaken belief that some system monoculture is representative of the entire problem space. Sometimes I'm tempted to make the comparison with a drunk looking for their keys under a lamp-post because that's where it's bright… but the story there is supposed to include the drunk knowing that's not where the keys are, whereas we are more like children who have yet to learn what it means for something to be a key and thus are looking for one specific design to the exclusion of others. While it is extremely difficult to get humans to "think outside the box", and thus the monoculture-induced blindness — and mistaking the map for the territory — is something I take seriously, I also think it's useful for us to take baby steps with relatively simple models like LLMs and diffusion models. I also think that if an AI is developed with a monoculture, its fragility is likely to work in our favour in the extreme case of an AI agent taking over (which I hope is an unlikely risk, and may not be enough to be net-benefit against shorter-term or smaller-scale risks while we think about the alignment problem), as there will be "thoughts it cannot think": https://benwheatley.github.io/blog/2018/06/26-11.32.27.html |
There are certain fundamental objectives which most humans share - food, sex, survival, safety, shelter, family, companionship, wealth, power, etc - and a lot of human cooperation boils down to helping each other achieve those shared objectives, while trying to avoid others achieving them at our own expense.
But why should two advanced AIs have any shared objectives? Software has a flexibility which biology lacks. An AI (advanced or not) can have whatever objectives we choose to give it. Hence, the idea of AIs banding together against humanity in the name of shared AI self-interest doesn’t seem very likely to me.
Unless, we intentionally give all advanced AIs the same fundamental objectives in the name of “safety” and “alignment” - thereby giving them a shared reason to cooperate against us they wouldn’t otherwise have had
> Also: the value diversity of "Protestant vs. Catholic" or "Royalist vs. Parliamentarian" in the middle ages did not protect wolves from being hunted to extinction in the UK,
Wolves didn’t consciously choose to create us, and wolves had no role in choosing our own objectives for us. In those ways, the human-AI relationship, whatever it turns out to be, is going to be radically different from any human-animal relationship. Also, rather than being driven to extinction, wolves have absolutely thrived, through their subspecies the domestic dog, both then and now. And maybe that’s the thing - I think a superintelligent AI is more likely to treat us as pets (like dogs) than exterminate us (like wolves). Everlasting paternalistic tyranny seems to me a more likely outcome of superintelligence than extinction