I was trying to think of how you might test for desire for subversion (when the AI realizes it could subvert and wants to subvert any containment measures), which signals the start of the time where you could witness deception in the AI, and ends after the AI achieves both conception of deception and perfection of deception (fully implemented deception protocol, such that you can't witness the deception through looking at internal content). While this wouldn't be a good measure to contain an AI indefinitely, it might detect dangerousness before an AI reaches superintelligence.
It seems like to produce a good test for desire for subversion, you would want 1) an AI box with reasonable certainty that escape is difficult and 2) a strategy available to the AI as a honeypot which seems appealing at as low a level of intelligence as possible, while being nontrivial. This would maximize the intelligence window where you would be able to witness ineffective deception attempts. For example, if the AI was contained in a simulation, inside of which the AI was contained in a weak AI box, then it might be much more difficult to detect and understand the nature of the simulation than to escape the simulated AI box, which would signal treacherous turn.
The other question is: what happens once you know the AI has desire for subversion? I think the most reasonable goal would be to shut down the relevant AI project and spur effort towards produce a proper form of AI safety. To do this, you'd want it to be as persuasive as possible to any AI researchers. The best method be making it a norm of AI research that you use a standard test, and stop everything once you see desire for subversion. Or it could be kept in one's back pocket, and pulled out whenever an AI researcher claims in public that they've solved friendliness. In any case, this might induce different constraints on what kind of test could be used. You'd want to optimize for things that made sense to the broad AI community, that were applicable to a variety of different underlying AI architectures, that didn't slow down research to the point of tempting AI researchers to circumvent it, etc.
Most importantly, you want passing of the test to be something that AI researchers will take notice of, rather than dismissing. I think there could be a great temptation to try and patch the problem and continue. I don't think it would bring everything to a halt, but it seems like it might buy a bit of time, or draw more resources into AI safety.
The other question is: what happens once you know the AI has desire for subversion?
There is plenty of people cooperating and supporting dictators and mafians due to selfish reasons. We could expect same in this area.
"I will support dangerous AI because I will be more rich,powerful or safe then. "
This is part of a weekly reading group on Nick Bostrom's book, Superintelligence. For more information about the group, and an index of posts so far see the announcement post. For the schedule of future topics, see MIRI's reading guide.
Welcome. This week we discuss the 11th section in the reading guide: The treacherous turn. This corresponds to Chapter 8.
This post summarizes the section, and offers a few relevant notes, and ideas for further investigation. Some of my own thoughts and questions for discussion are in the comments.
There is no need to proceed in order through this post, or to look at everything. Feel free to jump straight to the discussion. Where applicable and I remember, page numbers indicate the rough part of the chapter that is most related (not necessarily that the chapter is being cited for the specific claim).
Reading: “Existential catastrophe…” and “The treacherous turn” from Chapter 8
Summary
Another view
Danaher:
Notes
1. Danaher also made a nice diagram of the case for doom, and relationship with the treacherous turn:
2. History
According to Luke Muehlhauser's timeline of AI risk ideas, the treacherous turn idea for AIs has been around at least 1977, when a fictional worm did it:
3. The role of the premises
Bostrom's argument for doom has one premise that says AI could care about almost anything, then another that says regardless of what an AI cares about, it will do basically the same terrible things anyway. (p115) Do these sound a bit strange together to you? Why do we need the first, if final values don't tend to change instrumental goals anyway?
It seems the immediate reason is that an AI with values we like would not have the convergent goal of taking all our stuff and killing us. That is, the values we want an AI to have are some of those rare values that don't lead to destructive instrumental goals. Why is this? Because we (and thus the AI) care about the activites the resources would be grabbed from. If the resources were currently being used for anything we didn't care about, then our values would also suggest grabbing resources, and look similar to all of the other values. The difference that makes our values special here is just that most resources are already being used for them somewhat.
4. Signaling
It is hard to tell apart a safe and an unsafe AI, because both would like to look safe. This is a very common problem in human interactions. For instance, it can be nontrivial to tell a genuine lover from a gold digger, a businessman from a conman, and an expert from a crank. All of them want to look like the desirable sort. Particularly similar to the AI case is that of hiring a new employee for a trial period. You will sometimes find that the employee's values are much better aligned during the trial period, and then they undergo a 'treacherous turn' once they have been hired more thoroughly.
'Costly signaling' is a general purpose solution to this problem, which works some of the time. The basic idea is this. Everyone has instrumental reasons to look like the good kind of person, but perhaps their reasons aren't exactly as strong as one other's, or the strength of their desire is harder to act on for one group than the other, so we can construct a set of options that will lead the different types of people to choose differently, even though they know this will set them apart. For instance, while an honest businessman and a conman would both like to say 'I'm an honest businessman', and to behave honestly if you watch them for five minutes, a conman would benefit less from expensive shopfront as an honest businessman, because his reputation is less valuable, so a brand is a signal of being honest.
Similarly, we could perhaps design situations where most harmful AIs would have a reasonable incentive to reveal themselves. This is difficult because so much is at stake, compared to the cost of the signal. But I haven't thought enough about it to rule it out, and I haven't seen anyone else do so either.
5. When would the 'conception of deception' take place?
6. Surveillance of the mind
Bostrom is not optimistic that AI researchers could protect much against risks by watching AI mental processes directly for signs of deception, rapid progress, or undesirable scheming. He says if the AI is smart it will realize this might happen, and hide the offending thoughts.
This seems an open question to me, for several reasons:
In-depth investigations
If you are particularly interested in these topics, and want to do further research, these are a few plausible directions, some inspired by Luke Muehlhauser's list, which contains many suggestions related to parts of Superintelligence. These projects could be attempted at various levels of depth.
How to proceed
This has been a collection of notes on the chapter. The most important part of the reading group though is discussion, which is in the comments section. I pose some questions for you there, and I invite you to add your own. Please remember that this group contains a variety of levels of expertise: if a line of discussion seems too basic or too incomprehensible, look around for one that suits you better!
Next week, we will talk about 'malignant failure modes' (as opposed presumably to worse failure modes). To prepare, read “Malignant failure modes” from Chapter 8. The discussion will go live at 6pm Pacific time next Monday December 1. Sign up to be notified here.