|
|
|
|
|
by vkou
40 days ago
|
|
> A superintelligence that is subservient to its operator is an informational superweapon. The five dollar wrench attack will put an end to that operator's use of an informational superweapon. > I agree that this sounds fanciful, but you can see what existing cyberattacks can do to organisations What can it do? Generally, a minor disruption to operations. It consistently does a lot less than what law enforcement can do to you if you start messing with other rich peoples' money, while having enough of a presence to own a super-intelligence and a trillion-dollar data center. |
|
Conventional hackers are limited by the serial nature of their work - finding breaches, exploiting them, conducting further exploration of the network, trying not to get detected - in ways that a superintelligence would not be. The latter could be a hundred times as effective, a hundred times as fast, and a hundred times more parallel.
I agree that this is unlikely to happen because the societal bill would come due in time, but my point is that a month's lead is enough to do significant and lasting damage.