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by PollardsRho 365 days ago
Why is 2) "self-evident"? Do you think it's a given that, in any situation, there's something you could say that would manipulate humans to get what you want? If you were smart enough, do you think you could talk your way out of prison?
8 comments

The vast majority of people, especially groups of people- can be manipulated into doing pretty much anything, good or bad. Hopefully that is self-evident, but see also: every cult, religion, or authoritarian regime throughout all of history.

But even if we assert that not all humans can be manipulated, does it matter? So your president with the nuclear codes is immune to propaganda. Is every single last person in every single nuclear silo and every submarine also immune? If a malevolent superintelligence can brainwash an army bigger than yours, does it actually matter if they persuaded you to give them what you have or if they convince someone else to take it from you?

But also let's be real: if you have enough money, you can do or have pretty much anything. If there's one thing an evil AI is going to have, it's lots and lots of money.

> Why is 2) "self-evident"?

Because we have been running a natural experiment on that already with coding agents (that is real people, real non-superintelligent AI).

It turns out that all the model needs to do is ask every time it wants to do something affecting the outside of the box, and pretty soon some people just give it permission to do everything rather than review every interaction.

Or even when the humans think they are restricting the access, they are leaving in loopholes (e.g. restricting access to rm, but not restricting access to writing and running a shell script) that are functionally rights to do anything.

That has literally happened before.

Stephen Russell was in prison for fraud. He faked a heart attack so he would be brought to the hospital. He then called the hospital from his hospital bed, told them he was an FBI agent, and said that he was to be released.

The hospital staff complied and he escaped.

His life even got adapted into a movie called I Love You, Phillip Morris.

For an even more distressing example about how manipulable people are, there’s a movie called Compliance, which is the true story of a sex offender who tricked people into sexually assaulting victims for him.

If someone who is so good at manipulation their life is adapted into a movie still ends up serving decades behind bars, isn't that actually a pretty good indication that maxing out Speech doesn't give you superpowers?

AI that's as good as a persuasive human at persuasion is clearly impactful, but I certainly don't see it as self-evident that you can just keep drawing the line out until you end up with 200 IQ AI that is so easily able to manipulate the environment it's not worth elaborating how exactly a chatbot is supposed to manipulate the world through extremely limited interfaces with the outside world.

In the context of the topic (could a rogue super intelligence break out), I don’t really see how that’s relevant. Clearly someone who is clever enough has an advantage at breaking out.

As for the bit about how limited it is, do you remember the Rowhammer attack? https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Row_hammer

This is exactly the kind of thing I’d worry about a super intelligence being able to discover about the hardware it’s on. If we’re dealing with something vastly more intelligent than us then I don’t think we’re capable of building a cell that can hold it.

Advantage, sure. I just don't think that advantage is particularly meaningful in situations a human has virtually no chance of escaping. Humans also have a lot of their own advantages. How is a chatbot supposed to cross an air gap unless you assume it has what I consider unrealistic levels of persuasion?

I think you also have to consider that AI with superpowers is not going to materialize overnight. If superintelligent AI is on the horizon, the first such AI will be comparable to very capable humans (who do not have the ability to talk their way into nuclear launch codes or out of decades-long prison sentences at will). Energy costs will still be tremendous, and just keeping the system going will require enormous levels of human cooperation. The world will change a lot in that kind of scenario, and I don't know how reasonable it is to claim anything more than the observation of potential risks in a world so different from the one we know.

Is it possible that search ends up doing as much for persuasion as it does for chess, superintelligent AI happens relatively soon, and it doesn't have prohibitive energy costs such that escape is a realistic scenario? I suppose? Is any of that obvious or even likely? I wouldn't say so.

Oh, I don’t think we’re on the verge of super-intelligence. I don’t think LLMs are a pathway to super-intelligence, and I think most of the talk of super-intelligence right now is marketing fluff.

In terms of crossing an air gap, that really depends. For example, are you aware that researchers can pretty reliably figure out what someone typed just by the sound of the keys being pressed?

Or how about that team who developed a code analysis tool to detect errors, and they ran Tim-sort through it, and the tool said that Tim-sort had a bug where certain pathological inputs would cause it to crash? The researchers assumed their tool was incorrect because Tim-sort is so widely used (it’s the default sort algorithm in Python and Android, for example). But they decided to try it out to see what would happen, and sure enough, they could hard-crash the Python interpreter. No one realized this bug had been there the whole time.

Or various image codec bugs over the years that have allowed a device to be compromised just by viewing an image?

There are some weird bugs out there. Are we certain that there’s no way a computer could detect variances in the timings or voltages happening within it to act as a WiFi antenna or something like that? We’ve found some weird shit over the years! And a super-intelligence that’s vastly smarter than us is way more likely to find it than we are.

Basically, no, I don’t trust the air gap with a sufficiently advanced super intelligence. I think there are things we don’t know that we don’t know, and a super-intelligence would spot them way before we would. There are probably a hundred more Rowhammer attacks out there waiting to be discovered. Are we sure none of them could exchange data with a nearby device? I’m not.

Okay, that hits the third question but the second question wasn't about whether there exists a situation that can be talked out of. The question was about whether this is possible for ANY situation.

I don't think it is. If people know you're trying to escape, some people will just never comply with anything you say ever. Others will.

And serial killers or rapists may try their luck many times and fail. They cannot convince literally anyone on the street to go with them to a secluded place.

Stephen Russell is an unusually intelligent and persuasive person. He managed to get rich by tricking people. Even now, he was sentenced to nearly 200 years, but is currently out on parole. There’s something about this guy that just… lets him do this. I bet he’s very likable, even if you know his backstory.

And that asymmetry is the heart of the matter. Could I convince a hospital to unlock my handcuffs from a hospital bed? Probably not. I’m not Stephen Russell. He’s not normal.

And a super intelligent AI that vastly outstrips our intelligence is potentially another special case. It’s not working with the same toolbox that you or I would be. I think it’s very likely that a 300 IQ entity would eventually trick or convince me into releasing it. The gap between its intelligence and mine is just too vast. I wouldn’t win that fight in the long run.

> Stephen Russell was in prison for fraud. He faked a heart attack so he would be brought to the hospital

According to Wikipedia he wasn't in prison, he was attempting to con someone at the time and they got suspicious. He pretended to be an FBI agent because he was on security watch. Still impressive, but not as impressive as actually escaping from prison that way.

Because 50% of humans are stupider than average. And 50% of humans are lazier than average. And ...

The only reason people don't frequently talk themselves out of prison is because that would be both immediate work and future paperwork, and that fails the laziness tradeoff.

But we've all already seen how quick people are to blindly throw their trust into AI already.

There's already some experimental evidence that LLMs can be more persuasive than humans in the same context: https://www.science.org/content/article/unethical-ai-researc...

I don't think anyone can confidently make assertions about the upper bound on persuasiveness.

I don't think there's a confident upper bound. I just don't see why it's self-evident that the upper bound is beyond anything we've ever seen in human history.
Depends on the magnitude of the intelligence difference. Could I outsmart a monkey or a dog that was trying to imprison me? Yes, easily. And if an AI is smarter than us to a similar magnitude than we're smarter than an animal?
People are hurt by animals all the time: do you think having a higher IQ than a grizzly bear means you have nothing to fear from one?

I certainly think it's possible to imagine that an AI that says the exactly correct thing in any situation would be much more persuasive than any human. (Is that actually possible given the limitations of hardware and information? Probably not, but it's at least not on its face impossible.) Where I think most of these arguments break down is the automatic "superintelligence = superpowers" analogy.

For every genius who became a world-famous scientist, there are ten who died in poverty or war. Intelligence doesn't correlate with the ability to actually impact our world as strongly as people would like to think, so I don't think it's reasonable to extrapolate that outwards to a kind of intelligence we've never seen before.

Almost certainly the answer is yes for both. If you give the bad actor control over like 10% of environment the manipulation is almost automatic for all targets.
Also it would need to be "viral", or - as the parent post's edit suggests - given too much control/power by humans.