Interesting talk at BOAO forum : Elon Musk, Bill Gates and Robin Li (Baidu CEO). They talk about Superintelligence at around 17:00 minute.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NG0ZjUfOBUs&feature=youtu.be&t=17m
Elon is critical of Andrew Ng remark that 'we should worry about AI like we should worry about Mars overpopulation' ("I know something about mars" LOL)
Bill Gates mentioned Nick Bostrom and his book 'Superintelligence'. His seems to have read the book. Cool.
Later, Robin Li mentions China Brain projects, which appears to be Chinese government AGI project (anyone knows something about it? Sounds interesting...hopefully it won't end like Japans 'fifth-generation computing' in the 80s)
Bill Gates mentioned Nick Bostrom and his book 'Superintelligence'. His seems to have read the book. Cool.
He not only mentions it. He recommends it to a room of influential people.
I'm leading a rationality training group. We're working through the most recent CFAR curriculum, but I also want to work from parts of the sequences.
Which posts in the sequences were particularly impactfull for you? Not just ones that you found interesting, but ideas that you actually implemented in your thinking about object-level stuff.
I'm particularly interested in posts that we could spin out into techniques to practice, like noticing confusion or leaving a line of retreat.
It's been more than a year since I wrote the mechanics of my recent productivity (shortly before being hired as a full-time MIRI researcher), and, as promised about a year ago, I have now posted a short update. It's been a wild year.
A lot of really stupid comments follow this article:
Tech titans’ latest project: Defy death
http://www.washingtonpost.com/sf/national/2015/04/04/tech-titans-latest-project-defy-death/
I recently stumbled across the work of Helen De Cruz. I think many of her articles will be of interest to readers of LW. Here are a few of particular interest:
I have joined the ranks of LWers with tumblrs.
Also, interested in discussion on conversational tops and bottoms.
Is there a way to view a user's submitted articles from oldest to newest? For example, if I want to read Yvain's articles in chronological order, how would I go about doing that?
I think I’ve found a somewhat easy-to-make error that could pose a significant existential risk when making an AGI. This error can potentially be found in hierarchical planning agents, where each high-level action (HLA) is essentially its own intelligent agent that determines what lower-level actions to do. Each higher-level action agent would treat determining what lower-level action to do as a planning problem and would try to take the action that maximizes its own utility function (if its a utility-based agent) or (if it’s a goal-based agent) probabilit...
Please insert some line-breaks at suitable points to make your comment be more readable. At the moment it's figuratively a wall of text.
Edit: Thank you.
Variable-score Iterated Prisoner's Dilemma?
There are a number of variants of the Iterated Prisoner's Dilemma - some with noise, some with random mutations, and so on. Different variants lead to somewhat different most-successful strategies. Does anyone know of any analysis done on IPD tourneys where each round's scoring isn't necessarily the same?
Has anyone seen a "group debate," where a group will decide on one point to put forward, and then another group will spend time coming up with a response, and then the first group will decide a response to that, and so on?
I was thinking of a conversational pattern I've seen, where one person will put forward an odd claim to a group, and then multiple members of the group will ask questions / make counterarguments to try to knock down the claim, but often in an uncoordinated way. That made me think of Kasparov Versus the World, where one player wo...
Why exactly did Eliezer stop writing here and started writing his new articles (on intelligent characters in fiction, angel investing etc.) on Facebook or Tumblr instead?
I'm trying to wrap my mind around Hay's "Universal semimeasures", where he proves some very interesting equivalences.
In order to follow all the derivations, it would be very useful if there was a tool to draw binary trees and do some outlining of the branches, sub-trees, etc. Do you know of anything like that?
Does anyone know why a lot of work has gone in to vegetable-based imitation beef and chicken, but not into good imitation fish?
The Age of Adaline, a film about a mysteriously negligibly senescent woman:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=clbSd2JzAqc
Let me guess: The unaging woman finds fulfillment by pulling an Arwen or some similar nonsense.
Because Hollywood can't (yet) make films about the utter coolness where ordinary people discover this woman's power, reverse engineer it and become negligibly senescent themselves.
Self Help, CBT and quantified self Android applications
A lot of people on LW seem to hold The Feeling Good Handbook, of Dr. Burns in high regard when it comes to effective self-help. I am through the process of browsing a PDF copy, and it indeed seems like a good resource, as it is not only written in an engaging way, but also packed with various exercises, such as writing your day plan and reviewing it later while assigning Pleasure and Purpose scores to various tasks.
The problem I have with this, and any other self-help-exercise style of books is that I ...
Cold/flu, I hate having to spend a week in bed every 8 weeks or so. Any less-known tips?
For example I thought that dealing with ear pain with a cup of pan heated salt poured into a sock and held against it (increases blood circulation and somehow that helps) is pretty universal, but just yesterday it turned out an Austrian pharmacist never heard about it. It may be new to you as well. As a traditional folk remedy, it provides very quick symptomatic belief, works in about 10 mins, but if the pain returns the next day, doctor.
For the record, the known tip...
A quote for those of you who are interested in decision theory, taken from Counterfactuals and Newcomb's Problem (sorry, though: gated link):
...My second observation is closely related to the first. It is true that the state of box 2 is not causally dependent upon my act, in Newcomb's problem. But another kind of dependence relation obtains which is at least as important as causal independence and which seems to take clear precedence in the limit case. If I am completely certain that the being has predicted correctly, then the state of box 2 depends logical
Recently several people suggested opening a separate website for rational (or Less Irrational) discussion of political issues. If such a website is created, will you be interested in participating?
[pollid:845]
How many hours/days of coding or testing are we talking about?
I tried it once. In theory, it should have been super easy. In practice, after a few days of trying to make the damned software run on my computer, I gave up. Of course if I can't make it run, I cannot test any changes I make.
I think the code is freely available, so if you feel heroic, try it at home. Or use the Reddit code, which is almost the same thing.
I believe it would be easier to rewrite the whole thing from scratch. Give me a year's salary, and I would be happy to rewrite the whole thing in Java, and then to maintain in. Any other way just seems more difficult. :(
new account?
Yep, I realized I write too much about my work. I do not suspect my colleagues to read LW, but they could still put my name on google and find something work-related in top results. So I am slightly reducing the risk in the future.
I've been working through the sequences and have been trying to apply things to my current project that has to do with remaking money. I'd appreciate any feedback. Did I miss anything major? Am I on the right track to fix my thinking?
http://www.hypercapital.info/news/2015/4/9/hypercapitalism-what-you-think-about-money-is-wrong
I'd love some feedback on the latest update on my kickstarter. Would anyone be willing to make sure I haven't misstated the math and/or concepts?
Hypercapitalism: Information Theory and Bayes
https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/hypercapital/hypercapital-experiment-testnet-apis/posts/1190876
I think you have failed to consider the requirements of Kickstarter. You need to really think about your marketing, deliver as clear and slick a statement of your project as possible, and imitate as much as you can of successful similar kickstarter projects.
Your video is neither clear nor slick (verbal explanation with random camera angles is a poor way for most people to absorb information), and needs visual aids at least.
I watched a couple minutes of explanation, and then zoned out. Sorry.
I'm guessing from your low funds that you've also done little to evangelize your concept, or have been unsuccessful in doing so.
I also think Kickstarter for coding projects is a high barrier, since so much programming is volunteer open-source projects, people wonder why they'd donate extra. And you offer no rewards for backers, a key element of Kickstarter's concept.
You also say in the first paragraph "the project isn't going well".
If it's worth saying, but not worth its own post (even in Discussion), then it goes here.
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