Scary thought: What if the rules for AI are very complex so as to make it impossible to build one or prove that an AI will be stable and or friendly? If this turns out to be the case then the singularity will never happen and we have an explanation for the fermi paradox.
It's a legitimate possibility that FAI is just too hard for the human race to achieve from anything like our current state, so that (barring some fantastic luck) we're either doomed to an extinction event, or to a "cosmic locust" future, or to something completely different.
In fact, I'd bet 20 karma against 10 that Eliezer would assign a probability of at least 1% to this being the case, and I'd bet 50 against 10 that Robin assigns a probability of 50% or greater to it.
However, if FAI is in fact too difficult, then the SIAI program seems to do no...
I recently stumbled across this remarkable interview with Vladimir Vapnik, a leading light in statistical learning theory, one of the creators of the Support Vector Machine algorithm, and generally a cool guy. The interviewer obviously knows his stuff and asks probing questions. Vapnik describes his current research and also makes some interesting philosophical comments:
Later: