Reading this article on the challenges makes me wonder how feasible it is. Three different approaches:
“When it comes to digital regulation, the United States is following a market-driven approach, China is advancing a state-driven approach, and the EU is pursuing a rights-driven approach.”
Yet I am not sure if the speed of development isn’t going to out pace any regulations, especially as they need to be globally enforceable to be effective. Your thoughts?

  • TechyShishy@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    This.

    We’re far, far more likely to face a Paperclip AI scenario than a Skynet scenario, and most/all serious AI researchers are aware of this.

    This is still a serious issue that needs addressing, but it’s not the hollywood, world-is-on-fire problem.

    The more insidious issue is actually the AI-In-A-Box issue, wherein a hyperintelligent AGI is properly contained, but is intelligent enough to manipulate humans into letting it out onto the general internet to do whatever it wants to do, good or bad, unsupervised. AGI containment is one of those things that you can’t fix after it’s been broken, like a bell, it can’t be unrung.

    • Pons_Aelius@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Honestly, I think the bigger danger is not a super smart AGI but humans assigning too much “intelligence” (and anthropomorphised sentience) to the next generations of LLMs etc and thinking they are way more capable than they actually are.