Editing this interview made me excited that established academics were starting to take AI safety seriously. Curious how this trend has evolved since then, with Prof Murfet and beyond.
One thing that catches my attention: The part about Lee Sedol indicates that the thing that’s lost when AI overtakes humans is the humans who can no longer compete. But I’m not sure I agree; it could well be a force multiplier. Maybe it’s not so much “who’s stuck in the kiddie corner” but more “what can we do with all this added insight?”
Editing this interview made me excited that established academics were starting to take AI safety seriously. Curious how this trend has evolved since then, with Prof Murfet and beyond.
One thing that catches my attention: The part about Lee Sedol indicates that the thing that’s lost when AI overtakes humans is the humans who can no longer compete. But I’m not sure I agree; it could well be a force multiplier. Maybe it’s not so much “who’s stuck in the kiddie corner” but more “what can we do with all this added insight?”