| > vouching for less regulations and more exposure is simply irresponsible. We let people buy 6,000 pound vehicles capable of traveling 100+ mph. We let people buy sharp knives and guns. And heat their homes with flammable gas. And hike up dangerous tall mountains. I think the LLM is the least of society's worries and this pervasive thinking that everything needs to be wrapped up in bubble wrap is what is actually dangerous. Can a thought be dangerous? Should we prevent people from thinking or being exposed to certain things? That sounds far more Orwellian. If you want to criminalize illegal use of LLMs for fraud, then do that. But don't make the technology inaccessible and patronize people by telling them they're not smart enough to understand the danger. This is not a "fragile world" technology in its current form. When they're embodied, walking around, and killing people, then you can sound the alarm. |
> We let people buy 6,000 pound vehicles capable of traveling 100+ mph.
> We let people buy sharp knives and guns. And heat their homes with flammable gas. And hike up dangerous tall mountains.
All of those have regulations around them, and people have gotten familiar with how they work. More importantly, they're hardly disrupting to our lives as AI technology has the potential to be.
We didn't invent airplanes and let people on them overnight. It took decades for the airline industry to form, and even more for flights to be accepted as a standard form of transportation. We created strict regulations that plane manufacturers and airlines must follow, which were refined over the 20th century.
Was this unnecessary and Orwellian? Obviously the dangers of flight were very clear, so we took precautions to ensure the necessary safety. With AI, these dangers are not that clear.
> If you want to criminalize illegal use of LLMs for fraud, then do that. But don't make the technology inaccessible and patronize people by telling them they're not smart enough to understand the danger.
It's far from patronizing; it's just reality. People don't understand the dangers of the modern internet either, yet they're subjects of privacy violations, identity theft, scams, and all sorts of psychological manipulation from advertising and propaganda that influences how they think, vote and behave in society. Democratic institutions are crumbling, sociopolitical tensions are the highest they've been in the past 30 years in most western countries, and yet you would be fine with unleashing a technology that has a high chance of making this worse? Without any guardrails, or even some time for humanity to start addressing some of the existential questions I mentioned in my previous post? Again, this would be highly irresponsible and dangerous.
And yet I'm sure that's what's going to happen in most countries. It's people who think like you that are pushing this technology forward, and unfortunately they have a strong influence over governments and the zeitgeist. I just hope that we can eventually climb out of the hole we're currently digging ourselves into.