If your takeaway here is “deploying AI agents is like owning slave-soldiers”, please, please touch grass (then tell us how it feels).
Damp, and the clover is strangely reminiscent of bread, in a way that I haven’t quite placed.
For new slaves, read newly trained AI models.
The Mamluks were training many slaves because of inherent limitations in the capability of the bodies that were available. I’m wondering whether to expect an AI-elite-trains-AI-elite world to have one trainer or many, and whether to expect it to have one big model or many smaller ones. If it’s many smaller models and they fight, then a Thai proverb applies: when elephants fight, the grass gets trampled; ie the harm to humans might not depend very much on which model wins.
Damp, and the clover is strangely reminiscent of bread, in a way that I haven’t quite placed.
For new slaves, read newly trained AI models.
The Mamluks were training many slaves because of inherent limitations in the capability of the bodies that were available. I’m wondering whether to expect an AI-elite-trains-AI-elite world to have one trainer or many, and whether to expect it to have one big model or many smaller ones. If it’s many smaller models and they fight, then a Thai proverb applies: when elephants fight, the grass gets trampled; ie the harm to humans might not depend very much on which model wins.