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.
Writing provably correct software is possible today, it's just extremely time-consuming.
Can you name a documented nontrivial program with >1000 lines of code that ran correctly on the first try? What data exists on long computer programs that were not tested early on in their development?
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 what's possible in a universe we don't understand. So I'd much rather stake the future of humanity on the consistency of ZFC or some such than on the efficacy of some "First Law of Not Crossing the Beams" scheme, even if the latter is just so darn clever that no human has yet thought up a counter-example.
A couple of points: provably correct software and external hardware measures are not mutually exclusive. And if there really is a race going on between those who are concerned with AI safety and those who aren't, it likely makes sense for those who are concerned with safety to do a certain amount of corner-cutting.
How would one prove friendliness anyway? Does anyone have any idea of how to do this? Intuitively it seems to me that proving honesty would be considerably easier. If you can prove that an AI is honest and you've got a strong box for it, then you can modify its source code until it says the kind of thing you want in your conversations with it, and get somewhere close to friendliness. Maybe from there proving friendliness will be doable. it just seems to me that the greatest engineering accomplishment in history isn't going to come about without a certain amount of experimentation and prototyping.
And if there really is a race going on between those who are concerned with AI safety and those who aren't, it likely makes sense for those who are concerned with safety to do a certain amount of corner-cutting.
This is a good argument against wasting a bunch of time on elaborate physical safeguards.
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.