Epistemic status: The idea here has likely been articulated before, I just haven't noticed it, so it might be worth pointing it out again.
Foom describes the idea of a rapid AI takeoff caused by an AI's ability to recursively improve itself. Most discussions about Foom assume that each next iteration of improved models can in principle be developed and deployed in a short amount of time. Current LLMs require huge amounts of data and compute to be trained. Even if GPT-4 or similar models were able to improve their own architecture, they would still need to be trained from scratch using that new architecture. This would take a long time and can't easily be done without people noticing. The most extreme Foom scenarios of models advancing many generations in < 24 hours seem therefore unlikely in the current LLM training paradigm.
There could be paths towards Foom with current LLMs that don't require new, improved models to be trained from scratch:
- A model might figure out how to adjust its own weights in a targeted way. This would essentially mean that the model has solved interpretability. It seems unlikely to me that it is possible to get to this point without running a lot of compute-intensive experiments.
- It's conceivable that the recursive self-improvement that leads to Foom doesn't happen on the level of the base LLM, but on a level above that, where multiple copies of a base model are called in a way that results in emergent behavior or agency, similar to what Auto-GPT is trying to do. I think this approach can potentially go a long way, but it might ultimately limited by how smart the base model is.
Insofar as it is required to train a new model with 100s of billions of parameters from scratch in order to make real progress towards AGI, there is an upper limit to how fast recursive self-improvement can progress.
It's not clear to me that it's necessarily possible to get to a point where a model can achieve rapid self-improvement without expensive training or experimenting. Evolution hasn't figured out a way to substantially reduce the time and resources required for any one human's cognitive development.
I agree that even in the current paradigm there are many paths towards sudden capability gains, like the suboptimal infrastructure scenario you pointed to. I just don't know if I would consider that FOOM, which in my understanding implies rapid recursive self-improvement.
Maybe this is just a technicality. I expect things to advance pretty rapidly from now on with no end in sight. But before we had these huge models, FOOM with very fast recursive self-improvement seemed almost inevitable to me. Now I think that it's possible that model size and training compute put at least some cap on the rate of self-improvement (maybe weeks instead of minutes).