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by arcanus
378 days ago
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> And when I reach the part where the AI, having copied itself all over the Internet and built robot factories, then invents and releases self-replicating nanotechnology that gobbles the surface of the earth in hours or days, a large part of me still screams out that there must be practical bottlenecks that haven’t been entirely accounted for here. This is the crux of the issue. There's simply no clearly articulated doom scenarios that don't involve massive leaps in capabilities that are explained away by the 'singularity' being essentially magic. The entire approach is a doomed version of deus ex machina. It also appears quite telling the traditional approach is focused on exotic technologies, such as nanotech, and not ICBMs. That's also magical thinking. |
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The other huge existential risk is someone intentionally creating a doomsday bug. Think airborne HIV with a long incubation period, or an airborne cancer causing virus. Something that would spread far and wide and cause enough debilitation and death that it leads to the collapse of civilization, then continues to hang around and kill people post-collapse (with no health care) to the point that the human race is in long term danger of extinction.
Both of those are extremely plausible to the point that the explanation for why they haven't happened yet is "nobody with the means has been that evil yet."