Comment by palmotea
Comment by palmotea a day ago
One way to achieve superhuman intelligence in AI is to make humans dumber.
Comment by palmotea a day ago
One way to achieve superhuman intelligence in AI is to make humans dumber.
The TVs prior to the 1970s/solid state era were not very reliable. They needed repair often enough that "TV repairman" was a viable occupation. I remember having to turn on the TV a half hour before my dad got home from work so it would be "warmed up" so he could watch the evening news. We're still at that stage of AI.
Raises hand
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43303755
I'm proud to see it evolving in the wild, this version is better. Or you know it could just be in the zeitgeist.
That’s only if our stated goal is to make superhuman AI and we use AI at every level to help drive that goal. Point received.
anybody who's ever tried to play bar trivia with a team should recognize this
That’s an interesting point. If we created super-intelligence but it wasn’t anthropomorphic, we might just not consider it super-intelligent as a sort of ego defence mechanism.
Much good (and bad) sci-fi was written about this. In it, usually this leads to some massive conflict that forces humans to admit machines as equals or superiors.
If we do develop super-intelligence or consciousness in machines, I wonder how that will all go in reality.
Some things I think about are how different the goals could be
For example, human and biological based goals are around self-preservation and propagation. And this in turn is about resource appropriation to facilitate that, and systems of doing that become wealth accumulation. Species that don't do this don't continue existing.
A different branch of evolution of intelligence may take a different approach, that allows its affects to persist anyway.
This reminds me of the "universal building blocks of life" or the "standard model of biochemistry" I learned at school in the 90s. It held that all life requires water, carbon-based molecules, sunlight, and CHNOPS (carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, phosphorus and sulfur).
Since then, it's become clear that much life in the deep sea is anaerobic, doesn't use phosphorus, and may thrive without sunlight.
Sometimes anthropocentrism blinds us. It's a phenomenon that's quite interesting.
This reminds me of the guy who said he wanted computers to be as reliable as TVs. Then smart TVs were made and TV quality dropped to satisfy his goal.