Great meetup; conversation was had about the probability of AI risk. Initially I thought that the probability of AI disaster was close to 5%, but speaking to Anna Salamon convinced me that it was more like 60%.
Also some discussion about what strategies to follow for AI friendliness.
So it could affect the world through more verbal communication with humans. That's not as bad as things could be. Edit: The AI has as its First Law that the conducting metals in its circuitry must not touch other conducting metal that was not present when it was built. The conducting metal that will be present when it's built will be its CPU, RAM, etc, and a terminal. The terminal will be engineered to have a reasonably slow rate of character display for safety purposes (so no humans will be reprogrammed while basking in the hypnotic glow of characters rushing past.)
You know how sometimes someone will give you what seems like an impossible to solve hypothetical, and yet somehow, there's a solution? I'm pretty sure that the space of situations that are simply impossible to solve is much bigger than the space of situations that seem impossible but actually are possible.
And constructing one of these seems (to me) a much better bet than hoping that a complex computer program will be bug-free on its first trial run.
This is a good example of two idioms: First, what Bruce Schneier called "fence-post security". That's where you build a very tall fencepost in the middle of the desert. People don't climb the fencepost, they just walk around it.
Second, the idiom that would-be FAI solvers go into when they see a problem, and try to fix it by brute force, which manifests as "hard-wiring into the very circuitry" or "giving it as its ultimate priority" that X. X varies, but with a fairly constant idiom of getting an emotional charge, a sense of having delivered a very strong command or created something very powerful, by talking about how strongly the goal is to be enforced.
The November LW/OB meet-up will be this Saturday (two days from today), at the SIAI house in Santa Clara. Apologies for the late notice. We'll have fun, food, and attempts at rationality, as well as good general conversation. Details at the bay area OB/LW meet-up page.