Will AI superintelligence kill us all? (with Nate Soares) - Clearer Thinking with Spencer Greenberg
Description
Read the full transcript here.
Are the existential risks posed by superhuman AI fundamentally different from prior technological threats such as nuclear weapons or pandemics? How do the inherent “alien drives” that emerge from AI training processes complicate our ability to control or align these systems? Can we truly predict the behavior of entities that are “grown” rather than “crafted,” and what does this mean for accountability? To what extent does the analogy between human evolutionary drives and AI training objectives illuminate potential failure modes? How should we conceptualize the difference between superficial helpfulness and deeply embedded, unintended AI motivations? What lessons can we draw from AI hallucinations and deceptive behaviors about the limits of current alignment techniques? How do we assess the danger that AI systems might actively seek to preserve and propagate themselves against human intervention? Is the “death sentence” scenario a realistic prediction or a worst-case thought experiment? How much uncertainty should we tolerate when the stakes involve potential human extinction?
Links:
- Nate and Eliezer's recent book: If Anyone Builds It, Everyone Dies: Why Superhuman AI Would Kill Us All
- The Machine Intelligence Research Institute
Staff
- Spencer Greenberg — Host + Director
- Ryan Kessler — Producer + Technical Lead
- Uri Bram — Factotum
- WeAmplify — Transcriptionists
- Igor Scaldini — Marketing Consultant
Music
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