Machines don’t need to think for us to fear them, only to operate beyond our immediate grasp of understanding.
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Our greatest gift and curse is we can design systems we do not understand; To touch Heaven for the briefest moment as our scaffold fails us.
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To believe a machine made by humans needs to think in order to cause pain is to believe there needs to be intent for there to be suffering.
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Replying to @SwiftOnSecurity
People worried about AI leading to autonomous killing machines need to remember that land mines already exist.
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Replying to @XaiaX @SwiftOnSecurity
People worried about volcanoes need to remember that hot stoves exist? Is that not an ignorant and condescending thing to say? How can you compare dumb stationary area denial to something that can hunt and kill you, while being cheaper, faster and perhaps even smarter than you?
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Replying to @Plinz @SwiftOnSecurity
Because one of them exists. Meanwhile, development of the F35 started in 1992, and they are PROBABLY going to go into full production this year. The speed of tech doesn't matter compared to the speed of government. And they will in no circumstances be cheaper than people.
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The life of a single US soldier is worth several million USD (cost of training, deployment, upkeep, benefits to relatives, etc.). The US now heavily relies on remote controlled drones, but few countries can do that because of the required infrastructure. Autonomy changes that.
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