As you noted on your blog Elon Musk is concerned about unfriendly AI and from his comments about how escaping to mars won't be a solution because "The A.I. will chase us there pretty quickly" he might well share MIRI's fear that the AI will seek to capture all of the free energy of the universe. Peter Thiel, a major financial supporter of yours, probably also has this fear.
If after event W happens, Elon Musk, Peter Thiel, and a few of their peers see the truth of proposition X and decide that they and everything they care about will perish if policy Z doesn't get enacted, they will with high probability succeed in getting Z enacted.
I don't know if this story is true, but I read somewhere that when Julius Caesar was marching on the Roman Republic several Senators went to Pompey the Great, handed him a sword and said "save Rome." Perhaps when certain Ws happen we should make an analogous request of Musk or Thiel.
Cross-posted from my blog.
Yudkowsky writes:
My own projection goes more like this:
At least one clear difference between my projection and Yudkowsky's is that I expect AI-expert performance on the problem to improve substantially as a greater fraction of elite AI scientists begin to think about the issue in Near mode rather than Far mode.
As a friend of mine suggested recently, current elite awareness of the AGI safety challenge is roughly where elite awareness of the global warming challenge was in the early 80s. Except, I expect elite acknowledgement of the AGI safety challenge to spread more slowly than it did for global warming or nuclear security, because AGI is tougher to forecast in general, and involves trickier philosophical nuances. (Nobody was ever tempted to say, "But as the nuclear chain reaction grows in power, it will necessarily become more moral!")
Still, there is a worryingly non-negligible chance that AGI explodes "out of nowhere." Sometimes important theorems are proved suddenly after decades of failed attempts by other mathematicians, and sometimes a computational procedure is sped up by 20 orders of magnitude with a single breakthrough.