If you're worried about bug-like misalignments, then none of my above arguments apply. Bugs are disruptive already.
In that case, my only question is: Are humans better at the task or AI?
I don't think agency means power per se. I'm using agency in the sense of having autonomous goals. I only mentioned agency in the context of misalignments that resemble autonomous goals rather than bugs.Torco wrote: ↑Tue Mar 28, 2023 5:58 pmI think these are two distinct meanings of the word: in the first case, it means like ability to relatively autonomously fulfill a goal, i.e. to do work, and in the second, it means to be free. In the first sense, capitalism increases the agency of workers: it gives them better tools, better methods and better coordination capabilities: a person can till a vast field in an afternoon these days blabla.
I don't think human minds are infinitely malleable. Under capitalism, I don't think a super-intelligent AI will get anywhere unless it's given a bank account, significant amounts of starting capital and allowed to buy and sell. Thing is, humans cause trouble in that way already:Torco wrote: ↑Tue Mar 28, 2023 5:58 pm but I think your two positions are hard to reconcile here: if you think an AI can be built such that it manipulates people's behaviours in a more or less autonomous way, in the sense that it puts out output (i.e. enacts behavior), gets input from the world, and tries to maximize an outcome of the "shaping people's behavior" type... that is, almost definitionally, power, no? power in the "hands" of a blind and inscrutable pseudo-mind.
rotting bones wrote: ↑Sun Mar 19, 2023 5:02 pm I have a more fundamental objection. You obviously can't make any headway in the world without intelligence, but I personally think that money makes a much bigger difference under our current economic system. You don't need a super-intelligent AI to wreak havoc if it can find an angel investor to give it tons of cash. In fact, the intelligence need not be artificial. Humans do that already. Conversely, a super-intelligent AI won't be able to do anything unless it gets access to someone's bank account.
Now try it with a very complex model. Some kind of super-LSTM or transformer that aggregates streams of context from multiple outlets.Torco wrote: ↑Tue Mar 28, 2023 5:58 pm I have! nothing fancy, a tensorflow that guesses if a name is a boy's name or a girl's name that got like 98% right on test data it had never seen before. (98% sounds like nothing much, but many names *I* couldn't have figured out). a toy, of course, I'm sure the pros program those for breakfast, but it's given me like a general notion. And I agree, most cases of misalignment are trivial and remarkably silly: one gets impressions such as "so intelligent and so deeply stupid at the same time". Like those videogame AIs that are trained to reach the goal and that, when put in a novel environment, just go right cause that's what you do in a videogame.