I forgot that most people are not so surprisingly unafraid of AI because they somehow think it is not dangerous to share the planet with a species that is more intelligent than your own, but because they still cannot imagine that it will happen.
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Replying to @Plinz
I'm just not at all convinced intelligence works like this implies it does - that is, the smartest person wins, and everyone else stands around being useless - rather than it aggregating almost linearly. I just don't know. How do you know? (Do you know?)
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That only holds if you confine your comparisons to human individuals. Within humanity, the smartest person indeed doesn't always win. Within the global biosphere, the smartest SPECIES has utterly cleaned house.
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Replying to @NapalmSushi @jprwg
From the perspective of every other primate species, human intelligence is an uncontrollable weapon of mass destruction. Under which conditions should we treat the research efforts into superhuman artificial intelligence as careless experimentation with an extinction risk?
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Replying to @Plinz @NapalmSushi
Ok, but I'm not a primate species, I'm a primate, as are you. From my perspective, almost the entire world is out of my control. The question is: what does 1000x human intelligence imply? More "can dominate humanity 1000x over" or "can substitute for 1000x humans"?
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Replying to @jprwg @NapalmSushi
Our intelligence does not scale well, because brains cannot grow much larger, childhoods (= initial training periods) cannot be much extended, and communication between minds is limited. There is no obvious comparable limit for an electronic brain. One may outsmart all of us.
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Replying to @Plinz @NapalmSushi
But what does "outsmart" imply?? Are you sure it implies what you're implying it implies?
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The image "outsmart" suggests to me is a line of humans all queuing up to try to beat the superintelligence at a game of chess or similar. "Damn, that was out smartest guy, & he was still hopelessly outmatched!" I'm not not at all convinced that's how aggregate capability works.
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*our
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While it lacks a centrally directed will, industrial civilisation is worth looking at as an example of a creation that has gotten somewhat ahead of us. Propagation of infrastructure and knowledge already arguably exceeds propagation of our genes in importance to it's development.
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Yes! My point is that this existing hivemind is NOT THAT SMART
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