I want to be able to downvote this!
Edit: In this particular case, I shouldn't, since it wasn't intentional. (Incidentally, this is the way to amend/retract comments. Adding a note. There is a separate use case of removing stuff posted by mistake.)
jmed writes that it was originally a comment posted by accident that couldn't be deleted, so my comment doesn't apply in this case. But giving users ability to block downvoting and still having their text fixed in discussion seems like a bad thing. Even "revoked" comments need to be community-moderated. I understand that this is intended to set up incentives that prevent deletion of comments, but perhaps limiting negative comment score instead could do the trick.
One of the reasons that I am skeptical of contributing money to the SIAI is that I simply don't know what they would do with more money. The SIAI currently seems to be viable. Another reason is that I believe that an empirical approach is required, that we need to learn more about the nature of intelligence before we can even attempt to solve something like friendly AI.
I bring this up because I just came across an old post (2007) on the SIAI blog:
Some questions:
I also have some questions regarding the hiring of experts. Is there a way to figure out what exactly the current crew is working on in terms of friendly AI research? Peter de Blanc seems to be the only person who has done some actual work related to artificial intelligence.
I am aware that preparatory groundwork has to be done and capital has to be raised. But why is there no timeline? Why is there no progress report? What is missing for the SIAI to actually start working on friendly AI? The Singularity Institute is 10 years old, what is planned for the decade ahead?