Many people think you can solve the Friendly AI problem just by writing certain failsafe rules into the superintelligent machine's programming, like Asimov's Three Laws of Robotics. I thought the rebuttal to this was in "Basic AI Drives" or one of Yudkowsky's major articles, but after skimming them, I haven't found it. Where are the arguments concerning this suggestion?
To add to this, Eliezer also said that there is no reason to think that provably perfect safeguards are any easier to construct than an AI that just provably wants what you want (CEV or whatever) instead. It's super intelligent - once it wants different things than you, you've already lost.
True, but irrelevant, because humanity has never produced a provably-correct software project anywhere near as complex as an AI would be, we probably never will, and even if we had a mathematical proof it still wouldn't be a complete guarantee of safety because the proof might contain errors and might not cover every case we care about.
The right question to ask is not, "will this safeguard make my AI 100% safe?", but rather "will this safeguard reduce, increase, or have no effect on the probability of disaster, and by how much?" (And th... (read more)