rwallace comments on Hedging our Bets: The Case for Pursuing Whole Brain Emulation to Safeguard Humanity's Future - Less Wrong

11 Post author: inklesspen 01 March 2010 02:32AM

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Comment author: rwallace 03 March 2010 03:38:42AM 0 points [-]

"instant sociopath, just add a disutility function"

That is how it would turn out, yes :-)

If we have the ability to put in a reliable kill switch, then we have the means to make it unnecessary (by having it do things we want in general, not just the specific case of "shut down when we push that button, and don't stop us from doing so...").

Well, up to a point. It would mean we have the means to make the system understand simple requirements, not necessarily complex ones. If an AGI reliably understands 'shut down now', it probably also reliably understands 'translate this document into Russian' but that doesn't necessarily mean it can do anything with 'bring about world peace'.

Comment author: wedrifid 03 March 2010 03:46:35AM 2 points [-]

If an AGI reliably understands 'shut down now', it probably also reliably understands 'translate this document into Russian' but that doesn't necessarily mean it can do anything with 'bring about world peace'.

Unfortunately, it can, and that is one of the reasons we have to be careful. I don't want the entire population of the planet to be forcibly sedated.

Comment author: rwallace 03 March 2010 04:11:13AM 0 points [-]

I don't want the entire population of the planet to be forcibly sedated.

Leaving aside other reasons why that scenario is unrealistic, it does indeed illustrate why part of building a system that can reliably figure out what you mean by simple instructions, is making sure that when it's out of its depth, it stops with an error message or request for clarification instead of guessing.

Comment author: wedrifid 03 March 2010 04:35:32AM 1 point [-]

I think the problem is knowing when not to believe humans know what they actually want.