I'm not saying the AI doomers are wrong. I am saying that I find their arguments unconvincing and maybe the AI doomers need new spokespeople.
I listened to a couple hours of Fridman's interview of Yudkowsky and it seemed that his argument was mostly "it's self evident."
I listened to Hinton on the MIT Technology Review and it seemed that his argument was "the AI will be like a parent and we will be like the two year old child."
We need some better arguments, and especially some concrete examples. I feel like we dealt with this exact problem with those warning of climate change's impacts for decades. Namely a lack of relatable scenarios.
I'm finally starting to come around to the idea that, since language rules are not set in stone and are, in fact, set by how the usage evolves over time, "I" can be used as an object when it is part of a list of nouns. For instance:
"The waiter offered dessert to Brian and I, and we both accepted."
Whereas, I would say, "The waiter offered dessert to me and Brian, and we both accepted."
I find myself getting annoyed multiple times per day at the former example which in my mind is wrong. But I need to get over this, and realize that this is just how people speak, and therefore that's an acceptable way to speak.
This is good. A long way to go until the finish line, though. https://www.nytimes.com/2023/05/06/business/economy/california-reparations.html
Listened to this Hard Fork podcast about Blue Sky, where they talked about Twitter alternatives and federated social networks and managed to not utter the word "Mastodon" even once. https://www.nytimes.com/2023/05/05/podcasts/hard-fork-bluesky-ai-jobs.html
They also seemed to have a difficult time keeping the concepts of client and server straight. SMDH
I think lines are an underappreciated form of suffering, that people are far too willing to endure, and other people are far too willing to inflict. Aside from properly staffing facilities to reduce line wait time, we can also implement rather simplistic methods to ease their pain. Things like waiting with a number rather than standing in line, or having a phone hold system call you back rather than making you wait with terrible music.
If I started my own (tech) company one day, which I probably won't, but you never know, here's a few radical ideas I think I might implement:
1. Company is not allowed to grow to more than 30 employees/contractors.
2. Company has a $0 marketing budget.
3. There are no dedicated sales people.
4. As part of (3), this necessitates everyone having a "backup" role that is not closely related to their primary role. This helps reduce the bus factor, helps people have a more holistic understanding of the business, and allows for vacation and sickness to not overwhelm part of the company.
5. Everyone takes periodic turns in support and operations, even for just a few hours per month.
6. Radical compassionate accountability.
Great article talking about the positive transformation coming to the world over the next 25 years. https://bigthink.com/progress/the-great-progression-peter-leyden/
Any Mastodon experts know why when I search https://qoto.org/web/search for https://social.treehouse.systems/@marcan it shows up empty?
Right into my veins. One of my favorite players of all time, John Wall. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hAC-1BSY3vQ
Quite an interesting report. Gets you thinking about the near future of technology. Some quite big ideas coming down the pipe indeed. https://research.ark-invest.com/hubfs/1_Download_Files_ARK-Invest/Big_Ideas/ARK%20Invest_013123_Presentation_Big%20Ideas%202023_Final.pdf
I have moved to @fourmajor