the entire point of this is that gatekeeping is a fool's errand. Regardless of how confident you are that you will outsmart the AI, you can be wrong, and your confidence is very poor evidence for how right you are. Maybe a complex system of secret gatekeepers is the correct answer to how we develop useful AI, but I would vote against it in favor of trying to develop provably friendly AI unless the situation were very dire.
Why treat them as alternatives? Prove friendliness and then take precautions.
Suppose you're not convinced by the scariest arguments about the dangers of AI. You might go ahead and try to make one without anything like the mathematical safety proofs MIRI would want. But you might still do well to adopt some of Unnamed's suggestions.
Summary
Furthermore, in the last thread I have asserted that
It would be quite bad for me to assert this without backing it up with a victory. So I did.
First Game Report - Tuxedage (GK) vs. Fjoelsvider (AI)
Second Game Report - Tuxedage (AI) vs. SoundLogic (GK)
Testimonies:
State of Mind
Post-Game Questions
$̶1̶5̶0̶$300 for any subsequent experiments regardless of outcome, plus an additional$̶1̶5̶0̶$450 if I win. (Edit: Holy shit. You guys are offering me crazy amounts of money to play this. What is wrong with you people? In response to incredible demand, I have raised the price.) If you feel queasy about giving me money, I'm perfectly fine with this money being donating to MIRI. It is also personal policy that I do not play friends (since I don't want to risk losing one), so if you know me personally (as many on this site do), I will not play regardless of monetary offer.Advice
These are tactics that have worked for me. I do not insist that they are the only tactics that exists, just one of many possible.
Playing as Gatekeeper
Playing as AI
Ps: Bored of regular LessWrong? Check out the LessWrong IRC! We have cake.