sbenthall comments on Intelligence explosion in organizations, or why I'm not worried about the singularity - Less Wrong
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Ok, let's recognize some diversity between corporations. There are lots of different kinds.
Some corporations fail. Others are enormously successful, commanding power at a global scale, with thousands and thousands of employees.
It's the latter kind of organization that I'm considering as a candidate for organizational superintelligence. These seem pretty robust and good at what they do (making shareholders profit).
As HalMorris suggests, that there are diminishing returns to profit with number of employees doesn't make the organization unsuccessful in reaching its goals. It's just that they face diminishing returns on a certain kind of resource. An AI could face similar diminishing returns.
I agree completely. I worry that in some cases this is going on. I've heard rumors of this sort of thing happening in the dormitories of Chinese factory workers, for example.
But more mundane ways of doing this involve giving employees bonuses based on company performance, or stock options. Or, for a different kind of organization, by providing citizens with a national identity. Organizations encourage loyalty in all kinds of ways.
As far as I know, large corporations are almost as ephemeral as small corporations.
Which tells you something about how valuable it is, and how ineffective each of the many ways is, no?