Huh, I’m surprised that Slashdot is still around. Sure, it was all the rage in 1997⁄98, like Reddit was in 2010, and it pioneered a lot of interesting tools and ideas, but it jumped the shark shortly after the IPO. Given how little it is mentioned elsewhere, I assume that it has lost its relevance by now. How large is the inferential distance on Reddit? I recall Luke’s AMA, but I’m sure there were more discussions.
Reddit isn’t a single community; it’s a forum system with a lot of disparate communities that don’t necessarily have all that much to do with each other. Think of it as less like Slashdot, and more like a private Usenet with more moderated groups.
In r/futurology there is a lot more knowledge than average about singularity related issues. Some of people still aren’t aware of the dangers of AI, or believe them, or believe AI is even possible. Most the futurists I run into seem to think copying human brains into machines or uploading human intelligence will happen instead of the runaway utility maximizers that are talked about here. And there is also a lot of optimism about the future, that whatever happens will be good in the end or whatever, like the world is a movie plot.
Reddit in general doesn’t seem to talk about it much. I wouldn’t be surprised if many people didn’t even know what the singularity was, let alone take it seriously. This is just my opinion from what I have seen though, a survey or something would be more scientific, if you could get people to take it.
Huh, I’m surprised that Slashdot is still around. Sure, it was all the rage in 1997⁄98, like Reddit was in 2010, and it pioneered a lot of interesting tools and ideas, but it jumped the shark shortly after the IPO. Given how little it is mentioned elsewhere, I assume that it has lost its relevance by now. How large is the inferential distance on Reddit? I recall Luke’s AMA, but I’m sure there were more discussions.
Reddit isn’t a single community; it’s a forum system with a lot of disparate communities that don’t necessarily have all that much to do with each other. Think of it as less like Slashdot, and more like a private Usenet with more moderated groups.
It was still getting more than 3 million visitors per month, as of 2012 (source)
In r/futurology there is a lot more knowledge than average about singularity related issues. Some of people still aren’t aware of the dangers of AI, or believe them, or believe AI is even possible. Most the futurists I run into seem to think copying human brains into machines or uploading human intelligence will happen instead of the runaway utility maximizers that are talked about here. And there is also a lot of optimism about the future, that whatever happens will be good in the end or whatever, like the world is a movie plot.
Reddit in general doesn’t seem to talk about it much. I wouldn’t be surprised if many people didn’t even know what the singularity was, let alone take it seriously. This is just my opinion from what I have seen though, a survey or something would be more scientific, if you could get people to take it.
EDIT: Would → wouldn’t