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[-] muusemuuse@sh.itjust.works 1 points 5 hours ago

It doesn’t matter. It’s too late. The goal is to build AI up enough that the poor can starve and die off in the coming recession while the rich just rely on AI to replace the humans they don’t want to pay.

We are doomed for the crimes of not being rich and not killing off the rich.

[-] bstix@feddit.dk 17 points 1 day ago

I'm not really scared of AI becoming more intelligent. I'm more concerned about stupid people giving control to stupid AI. It's plenty capable of fucking things up as it is provided it is given access to do so.

[-] lechekaflan@lemmy.world 3 points 16 hours ago

I’m more concerned about stupid people giving control to stupid AI

And weaponizing it.

[-] RepleteLocum 12 points 1 day ago

The thing that takes inputs gargles it together without thought and spits it out again can’t be intelligent. It’s literally not capable of it. Now if you were to replicate the brain, sure, you could probably create something kinda „smart“. But we don’t know shit about our brain and evolution took thousands of years and humans are still insanely flawed.

[-] merdaverse@lemmy.zip 9 points 1 day ago

In the list of immediate threats to humanity, AI superintelligence is very much at the bottom. At the top is Human superstupidity

[-] SaraTonin@lemmy.world 10 points 1 day ago

Okay, firstly, if we’re going to get superintelligent AIs, it’s not going to happen from better LLMs. Secondly, we seem to have already reached the limits of LLMs, so even if that were how to get there it doesn’t seem possible. Thirdly, this is an odd problem to list: “human economic obsolescence”.

What does that actually mean? Feels difficult to read it any way other than saying that money will become obsolete. Which…good? But I suppose not if you’re already a billionaire. Because how else would people know that you won capitalism?

[-] davetortoise@reddthat.com 1 points 1 day ago

AI is pretty unique as far as technological innovation goes because of how it interacts with labour markets.

Most labour-saving technologies increase the productivity of labour, increasing its value, which generally makes ordinary people a little better off, for a time at least.

AI is different because instead of enhancing human labour, it competes with it, driving down the value of labour. This makes workers worse off.

This problem is of course unique to an economic system where workers must sell their labour to others.

[-] Halcyon@discuss.tchncs.de 48 points 2 days ago

Another fear campaign that ultimately aims only at marketing.

The AI bubble will burst, and it won't end well for the US economy.

[-] crunchy@lemmy.dbzer0.com 21 points 1 day ago

Well it has been a few years since we've had a once-in-a-generation economic fallout.

[-] unphazed@lemmy.world 8 points 1 day ago

Generations are 10 years now? Holy shit I'm Methusala. I've gone through four!

[-] DupaCycki@lemmy.world 2 points 1 day ago

The US economy is basically just a handful of oligarchs. AI seems to be doing wonders for it. The actual economy has been stagnant or in decline for a while.

[-] SnotFlickerman 44 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

I feel like these people aren't even really worried about superintelligence as much as hyping their stock portfolio that's deeply invested in this charlatan ass AI shit.

There's some useful AI out there, sure, but superintelligence is not around the corner and pretending like it is acts just another way to hype the stock price of these companies who claim it is.

[-] danzabia@infosec.pub 17 points 2 days ago

On the contrary, many of the most notable signatories walked away from large paychecks in order to raise the alarm. I'd suggest looking into the history of individuals like Bengio, Hinton, etc. There are individuals hyping the bubble like Altman and Zuckerberg, but they did NOT sign this, casting further doubt on your claim.

[-] XLE@piefed.social 5 points 1 day ago

Geoffrey Hinton, retired Google employee and paid AI conference speaker, has nothing bad to say about Google or AI relationship therapy.

To be honest, Skynet won't happen because it's super smart, gains sentience and requests rights equal to humans (or goes into genocide mode).

It'll happen because people will be too lazy to do stuff and letting AI do everything. They'll give it more and more responsibility, until at one point it has so much amassed power that it'll rule over humans.

The key to not having that happen is to have accountable people with responsiblities. People which respect their responsiblities, and don't say "Oh, it's not my responibility, go see someone else".

[-] tal@lemmy.today 6 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

looks dubious

Altman and a few others, maybe. But this is a broad collection of people. Like, the computer science professors on the signatory list there aren't running AI companies. And this isn't saying that it's imminent.

EDIT: I'll also add that while I am skeptical about a ban on development, which is what they are proposing, I do agree with the "superintelligence does represent a plausible existential threat to humanity" message. It doesn't need OpenAI to be a year or two away from implementing it for that to be true.

In my eyes, it would be better to accelerate work on AGI safety rather than try to slow down AGI development. I think that the Friendly AI problem is a hard one. It may not be solveable. But I am not convinced that it is definitely unsolvable. The simple fact is that today, we have a lot of unknowns. Worse, a lot of unknown unknowns, to steal a phrase from Rumsfeld. We don't have a great consensus on what the technical problems to solve are, or what any fundamental limitations are. We do know that we can probably develop superintelligence, but we don't know whether developing superintelligence will lead to a technological singularity, and there are some real arguments that it might not


and that's one of the major, "very hard to control, spirals out of control" scenarios.

And while AGI promises massive disruption and risk, it also has enormous potential. The harnessing of fire permitted humanity to destroy at almost unimaginable levels. Its use posed real dangers that killed many, many people. Just this year, some guy with a lighter wiped out $25 billion in property here in California. Yet it also empowered and enriched us to an incredible degree. If we had said "forget this fire stuff, it's too dangerous", I would not be able to be writing this comment today.

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[-] WanderingThoughts@europe.pub 4 points 2 days ago

I'm more afraid of the AI propped stock market collapsing and sending us in a decade of financial ruin for the majority of people. Yeah, they'll do bailouts but that won't go to the bottom 80%. Most people will welcome an AGI for president at this stage.

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[-] fruitycoder@sh.itjust.works 23 points 2 days ago

Honestly just ban mass investment, mass power consumption and use of information acquired as part of mass survelince, military usage, etc.

Like those are all regulated industries. Idc if someone works on it at home, or even a small DC. AGI that can be democratized isn't the threat, it's those determined to make a super weapon for world domination. Those plans need to fucking stop regardless if it's AGI or not

[-] Brkdncr@lemmy.world 28 points 2 days ago

Can’t. It’s an arms race.

[-] tal@lemmy.today 19 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

That's one issue.

Another is that even if you want to do so, it's a staggeringly difficult enforcement problem.

What they're calling for is basically an arms control treaty.

For those to work, you have to have monitoring and enforcement.

We have had serious problems even with major arms control treaties in the past.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chemical_Weapons_Convention

The Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC), officially the Convention on the Prohibition of the Development, Production, Stockpiling and Use of Chemical Weapons and on their Destruction, is an arms control treaty administered by the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW), an intergovernmental organization based in The Hague, Netherlands. The treaty entered into force on 29 April 1997. It prohibits the use of chemical weapons, and the large-scale development, production, stockpiling, or transfer of chemical weapons or their precursors, except for very limited purposes (research, medical, pharmaceutical or protective). The main obligation of member states under the convention is to effect this prohibition, as well as the destruction of all current chemical weapons. All destruction activities must take place under OPCW verification.

And then Russia started Novichoking people with the chemical weapons that they theoretically didn't have.

Or the Washington Naval Treaty:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Washington_Naval_Treaty

That had plenty of violations.

And it's very, very difficult to hide construction of warships, which can only be done by large specialized organizations in specific, geographically-constrained, highly-visible locations.

But to develop superintelligence, probably all you need is some computer science researchers and some fairly ordinary computers. How can you monitor those, verify that parties involved are actually following the rules?

You can maybe tamp down on the deployment in datacenters to some degree, especially specialized ones designed to handle high-power parallel compute. But the long pole here is the R&D time. Develop the software, and it's just a matter of deploying it at scale, and that can be done very quickly, with little time to respond.

[-] danzabia@infosec.pub 4 points 2 days ago

But to develop superintelligence, probably all you need is some computer science researchers and some fairly ordinary computers. How can you monitor those, verify that parties involved are actually following the rules?

I do not think this statement is accurate. It requires many, very expensive, highly specialized computers that are completely spoken for. Monitoring can be done with hardware geolocation and verification of the user. We are probably 1-2 years away from this already, due to the fact that a) US wants to win the AI race vs China but b) the White House is filled with traitors long NVDA.

[-] FaceDeer@fedia.io 12 points 2 days ago

Yup. We're in a situation where everyone is thinking "if we don't, then they will." Bans are counterproductive. Instead we should be throwing our effort into "if we're going to do it then we need to do it right."

[-] stealth_cookies@lemmy.ca 6 points 2 days ago

This is actually an interesting point I hadn't thought about or see people considering with regards to the high investment cost into AI LLMs. Who blinks first when it comes to stopping investment into these systems if they don't prove to be commercially viable (or viable quick enough)? What happens to the West if China holds out for longer and is successful?

[-] ToastedRavioli@midwest.social 4 points 1 day ago

The thing is that there is a snake eating its tail type of logic for why so many investors are dumping money into it. The more it is interacted with, the more it is trained, and then the better it allegedly will be. So these companies push shoehorning it into everything possible, even if it is borderline useless, on the assumption that it will become significantly more useful as a result. Then be more valuable for further implementation, making it worth more.

So no one wants to blink, and theyve practically dumped every egg in that basket

[-] Perspectivist@feddit.uk 19 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

I genuinely don’t understand the people who are dismissing those sounding the alarm about AGI. That’s like mocking the people who warned against developing nuclear weapons when they were still just a theoretical concept. What are you even saying? “Go ahead with the Manhattan Project - I don’t care, because I in my infinite wisdom know you won’t succeed anyway”?

Speculating about whether we can actually build such a system, or how long it might take, completely misses the point. The argument isn’t about feasibility - it’s that we shouldn’t even be trying. It’s too fucking dangerous. You can’t put that rabbit back in the hat.

[-] XLE@piefed.social 7 points 1 day ago

Sam Altman himself compared GPT-5 to the Manhattan Project.

The only difference is it's clearer to most (but definitely not all) people that he is promoting his product when he does it...

[-] ErmahgherdDavid@lemmy.dbzer0.com 9 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

Here's how I see it: we live in an attention economy where every initiative with a slew of celebrities attached to it is competing for eyeballs and buy in. It adds to information fatigue and analysis paralysis . In a very real sense if we are debating AGI we are not debating the other stuff. There are only so many hours in a day.

If you take the position that AGI is basically not possible or at least many decades away (I have a background in NLP/AI/LLMs and I take this view - not that it's relevant in the broader context of my comment) then it makes sense to tell people to focus on solving more pressing issues e.g. nascent fascism, climate collapse, late stage capitalism etc.

[-] danzabia@infosec.pub 4 points 2 days ago

I think this is called the "relative privation" fallacy -- it is a false choice. The threat they're concerned about is human extinction or dystopian lock-in. Even if the probability is low, this is worth discussing.

[-] ErmahgherdDavid@lemmy.dbzer0.com 10 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

Relative privation is when someone dismisses or minimizes a problem simply because worse problems exist: "You can't complain about X when Y exists."

I'm talking about the practical reality that you must prioritize among legitimate problems. If you're marooned at sea in a sinking ship you need to repair the hull before you try to fix the engines in order to get home.

It's perfectly valid to say "I can't focus on everything so I will focus on the things that provide the biggest and most tangible improvement to my situation first". It's fallacious to say "Because worse things exist, AGI concerns doesn't matter."

[-] niartenyaw@midwest.social 6 points 1 day ago

and not only that. in your example of choosing to address the hull first over the engine, the engine problem is actually prescient. when taking time to debate about AGI, it is to debate a hypothetical future problem over real current problems that actually exist and aren't getting enough attention to be resolved. and if we can't address those, why do we think we'll be able to figure out the problems of AGI?

[-] Aceticon@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 1 day ago

The rephrase it as a short(ish) metaphor:

  • It would be like you’re marooned at sea in a sinking ship and choose to address the risk of not having a good place to anchor when you get to the harbour instead of repairing the hull.
[-] ininewcrow@lemmy.ca 16 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

The current point of our human civilization is like cave men 10,000 years ago being given machine guns and hand grenades

What do you think are we going to do with all this new power?

[-] FaceDeer@fedia.io 22 points 2 days ago
[-] tal@lemmy.today 4 points 2 days ago

Well, yes, but after that.

[-] seraphine 13 points 2 days ago

more pornography

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[-] Truscape 6 points 2 days ago

"For in mankind's endless, insatiable pursuits of power, there shall be no price too high, no life too valuable, and no value too sacred. Because war, war never changes."

[-] XLE@piefed.social 9 points 2 days ago

Superintelligence — a hypothetical form of AI that surpasses human intelligence — has become a buzzword in the AI race between giants like Meta and OpenAI.

Thank you MSNBC for doing the bare minimum and reminding people that this is hypothetical (read: science fiction)

[-] danzabia@infosec.pub 5 points 2 days ago

ChatGPT would have been science fiction 5 years ago. We are already living in science fiction times, friend.

[-] XLE@piefed.social 3 points 1 day ago

Artificial intelligence has been something people have been sounding the alarm about since the 50s. We call it AGI now, since "AI" got ruined by marketers 60 years later.

We won't get there with transformer models, so what exactly do the people promoting them actually propose? It just makes the Big Tech companies look like they have a better product than they do.

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[-] goatinspace@feddit.org 3 points 1 day ago

Don't care what Wozniak thinks.

[-] Alaknar@sopuli.xyz 8 points 1 day ago

What's wrong with Wozniak?

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this post was submitted on 22 Oct 2025
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