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fooop

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fooop
·2 years ago·discuss
[dead]
fooop
·3 years ago·discuss
I, for one, am glad that the rationality-bubble is popping.
fooop
·3 years ago·discuss
these things are much more transparent than us experts like to think they are - people making "uneducated" decisions are often just making decisions that don't fall in line with the expectations of the "educated". Power is legible regardless of whether you know how to read or not (or code (or do immunological research)).
fooop
·3 years ago·discuss
the world these days is becoming more and more medieval: many different actors, all competing with one another, at different levels of power.

Imo, it's a good thing: regular ppl will be more suspicious about power overall and not make as many bad safety/convenience trades.
fooop
·3 years ago·discuss
nor should they, since the public is indeed being lied to.
fooop
·3 years ago·discuss
Speaks more to a fundamental misalignment between societal good and technological progress. The narrative (first born in the Enlightenment) about how reason, unfettered by tradition and nonage, is our best path towards happiness no longer holds. AI doomerism is an expression of this breakdown, but without the intellectual honesty required to dive to the root of the problem and consider whether Socrates may have been right about the corrupting influence of writing stuff down instead of memorizing it.

What's happening right now is people just starting to reckon with the fact that technological progress on it's own is necessarily unaligned with human interests. This problem has always existed, AI just makes it acute and unavoidable since it's no longer possible to invoke the long-tail of "whatever problem this fix creates will just get fixed later". The AI alignment problem is at it's core a problem of reconciling this, and it will inherently fail in absence of explicitly imposing non-Enlightenment values.

Seeking to build openAI as a nonprofit, as well as ousting Altman as CEO are both initial expressions of trying to reconcile the conflict, and seeing these attempts fail will only intensity it. It will be fascinating to watch as researchers slowly come to realize what the roots of the problem are, but also the lack of the social machinery required to combat the problem.
fooop
·3 years ago·discuss
[flagged]
fooop
·3 years ago·discuss
you mean, making everybody else aware of how smart the poster is
fooop
·3 years ago·discuss
> academic publishers are vultures that serve no purpose

This is a naively optimistic view of how knowledge production actually operates. Sure, the scientific endeavor is constrained by what is actually the case (i.e.reality), but without some kind of editorial oversight imposed from above nothing coherent nor useful will be produced. A thousand well-trained, well-intentioned researchers toiling away at a problem will not magically self-organize such that their collective efforts make tangible progress on large, intractable problems. This will be true regardless of how many fancy web2.0/3.0 niceties one throws at the problem, since experience has shown that such solutions only make the problems of social dominance worse, not better. In the end, this sentiment is nearly identical to people complaining about "capitalists".

Do capitalists and academic publishers have purposes to fulfill? Yes. Do they fulfill that purpose well these days? Absolutely not. Like many of our social institutions these days, the people who run them seem to fundamentally misunderstand what their roles are, deferring to some vague, financialized liberalism that believes all problems can be addressed by maximizing human-freedom, with no regard to bootstrapping problems. Because the institution ceases to perform it's role, people begin to believe it has no role. Worse yet, now that people have no idea what the institution's role even is, they have even less of a clue as to how to fix it.
fooop
·3 years ago·discuss
The business fundamentals and the emotional reality seem to be inherently at odds. I'll bet that this is a leading indicator for what's gonna happen in people medicine.
fooop
·3 years ago·discuss
ah yes. The solution for too much technology is obviously more technology. I'm so glad that we have all these smart people working for us.