[...] SIAI's Scary Idea goes way beyond the mere statement that there are risks as well as benefits associated with advanced AGI, and that AGI is a potential existential risk.
[...] Although an intense interest in rationalism is one of the hallmarks of the SIAI community, still I have not yet seen a clear logical argument for the Scary Idea laid out anywhere. (If I'm wrong, please send me the link, and I'll revise this post accordingly. Be aware that I've already at least skimmed everything Eliezer Yudkowsky has written on related topics.)
So if one wants a clear argument for the Scary Idea, one basically has to construct it oneself.
[...] If you put the above points all together, you come up with a heuristic argument for the Scary Idea. Roughly, the argument goes something like: If someone builds an advanced AGI without a provably Friendly architecture, probably it will have a hard takeoff, and then probably this will lead to a superhuman AGI system with an architecture drawn from the vast majority of mind-architectures that are not sufficiently harmonious with the complex, fragile human value system to make humans happy and keep humans around.
The line of argument makes sense, if you accept the premises.
But, I don't.
Ben Goertzel: The Singularity Institute's Scary Idea (and Why I Don't Buy It), October 29 2010. Thanks to XiXiDu for the pointer.
Life is dangerous: the issue is surely whether testing is more dangerous than not testing.
It seems to me that a likely outcome of pursuing a strategy involving searching for a proof is that - while you are searching for it - some other team makes a machine intelligence that works - and suddenly whether your machine is "friendly" - or not - becomes totally irrelevant.
I think bashing testing makes no sense. People are interested in proving what they can about machines - in the hope of making them more reliable - but that is not the same as not doing testing.
The idea that we can make an intelligent machine - but are incapable of constructing a test harness capable of restraining it - seems like a fallacy to me.
Poke into these beliefs, and people will soon refer you to the AI-box experiment - which purports to explain that restrained intelligent machines can trick human gate keepers.
...but so what? You don't imprison a super-intelligent agent - and then give the key to a single human and let them chat with the machine!