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.
If you let the robot affect the environment through heat, electromagnetic waves, variable load on the power circuits, gravity, etc (which it will, if it's on), it has a back door into reality. And you don't know if that's a fatal one.
But I think with enough thought, you could design things so that its backdoors would probably not be fatal. Contrast this with the fact that a complex computer program will probably behave incorrectly the first time you run it.
I don't think the plan is to hack CEV together in lisp and see what happens. Writing provably correct software is possible today, it's just extremely time-consuming. Contrast this with our incomplete knowledge of physics, and lack of criteria for what constitutes "good enough" physical security.
A bad hardware call seems far more likely to me than a fatal programming slip-up in a heavily verified software system. For software, we have axiomatic systems. There is no comparable method for assessing physical security, nothing but our best guess at wh...
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.