You think like a human because you are a human. Not because this is how an intelligent being thinks.
Just a thought.
Sometimes we talk about unnecessarily complex potential karma/upvote systems, so I thought I would throw out an idea along those lines:
Every time you post, you're prompted to predict the upvote/downvote ratio of your post.
Instead of being scored on raw upvotes, you're scored on something more like how accurately you predicted the future upvote/downvote ratio.
So if you write a good post that you expect to be upvoted, then you predict a high upvote/downvote ratio, and if you're well calibrated to your audience, then you actually achieve the ratio you predict...
This is a response to this comment.
Can you clarify what you mean by phenomenological and existentialist stances, and what you mean by saying that there is no true ontology? I agree that we could use somewhat different models of the world. For example, we don't have to divide between dogs and wolves, but could just call them one common name. I don't see what difference this makes. Dogs and wolves still exist in the world and would be potentially distinguishable in the way that we do, even if we did not distinguish them, and likewise the common thing would s...
Sorry for the delay in the creation of this open thread. Yesterday I didn't even check, usually someone steps up to the task. Anyway, it's here.
So...
Google News, US edition, front page, science section:
Russia's Fedor robot has learned to shoot guns with impressive precision. How do companies like Google, groups and individuals try to stop killer robots from taking over the world?
...are you happy now?
kickstarting as a funding method of scientific research.
" In Bollen’s system, scientists no longer have to apply; instead, they all receive an equal share of the funding budget annually—some €30,000 in the Netherlands, and $100,000 in the United States—but they have to donate a fixed percentage to other scientists whose work they respect and find important. “Our system is not based on committees’ judgments, but on the wisdom of the crowd,”
Bollen and his colleagues have tested their idea in computer simulations. If scientists allocated 50% of thei... I have said before that I think consciousness research is not getting enough attention in EA, and I want to add another argument for this claim:
Suppose we find compelling evidence that consciousness is merely "how information feels from the inside when it is being processed in certain complex ways", as Max Tegmark claims (and Dan Dennett and others agree). Then, I argue, we should be compelled from a utilitarian perspective to create a superintelligent AI that is provably conscious, regardless of whether it is safe, and regardless whether it kill...
Maybe this has been discussed ad absurdum, but what do people generally think about Facebook being an arbiter of truth?
Right now, Facebook does very little to identify content, only provide it. They faced criticism for allowing fake news to spread on the site, they don't push articles that have retractions, and they just now have added a "contested" flag that's less informative than Wikipedia's.
So the questions are: does Facebook have any responsibility to label/monitor content given that it can provide so much? If so, how? If not, why doesn't t...
"Arbiter of truth" is too big of a word.
People easily forget two important things:
Facebook is a social media, emphasis on media: it allows the dissemination of content, it does not produce it;
Facebook is a private, for profit enterprise: it exists to generate a revenue, not to provide a service to citizens.
Force 1 obviously acts against any censoring or control besides what is strictly illegal, but force 2 pushes for the creation of an environment that is customer friendly. That is the only reason why there is some form of control on the content published: because doing otherwise would lose customers.
People are silly if they delegate the responsibility of verifying the truth of a content to the transport layer, and the only reason that a flag button is present is because doing otherwise would lose customers.
That said, to answer your question:
No, Facebook does not have any responsability beyond what is strictly illegal. That from power comes responsibility is a silly implication written in a comic book, but it's not true in real life (it's almost the opposite). As a general rule of life, do not acquire your facts from comics.
"That from power comes responsibility is a silly implication written in a comic book, but it's not true in real life (it's almost the opposite). "
Evidence? I 100% disagree with your claim. Looking at governments or business, the people with more power tend to have a lot of responsibility both to other people in the gov't/company and to the gov't/company itself. The only kind of power I can think of that doesn't come with some responsibility is gun ownership. Even Facebook's power of content distribution comes with a responsibility to monetize, which then has downstream responsibilities.
If it's worth saying, but not worth its own post, then it goes here.
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