But I realize my experience may be atypical and there could be an abundance of avoidable Yudkowsky-hatred where I’m not looking, so would like to know more about that.
Yudkowsky-hatred isn’t the risk, Yudkowsky-mild-contempt is. People engage with things they hate, sometimes it brings respect and attention to both parties (by polarizing a crowd that would otherwise be indifferent.) But you never want to be exposed to mild contempt.
I can think of some examples of conversations about Eliezer that would fit the category but it is hard to translate them to text. The important part of the reaction was non-verbal. Cryonics was one topic and the problem there wasn’t that it was uncredible but that it was uncool. Another topic is the old “thinks he can know something about Friendly AIs when he hasn’t even made an AI yet” theme. Again, I’ve seen that reaction evident through mannerisms that in no way translate to text. You can convey that people aren’t socially relevant without anything so crude as saying stuff.
Yudkowsky-hatred isn’t the risk, Yudkowsky-mild-contempt is. People engage with things they hate, sometimes it brings respect and attention to both parties (by polarizing a crowd that would otherwise be indifferent.) But you never want to be exposed to mild contempt.
I can think of some examples of conversations about Eliezer that would fit the category but it is hard to translate them to text. The important part of the reaction was non-verbal. Cryonics was one topic and the problem there wasn’t that it was uncredible but that it was uncool. Another topic is the old “thinks he can know something about Friendly AIs when he hasn’t even made an AI yet” theme. Again, I’ve seen that reaction evident through mannerisms that in no way translate to text. You can convey that people aren’t socially relevant without anything so crude as saying stuff.
[insert the obvious bad pun here]
I know, I couldn’t think of worthy witticism to lampshade it so I let it slide. :P