Today, the AI Extinction Statement was released by the Center for AI Safety, a one-sentence statement jointly signed by a historic coalition of AI experts, professors, and tech leaders.
Geoffrey Hinton and Yoshua Bengio have signed, as have the CEOs of the major AGI labs–Sam Altman, Demis Hassabis, and Dario Amodei–as well as executives from Microsoft and Google (but notably not Meta).
The statement reads: “Mitigating the risk of extinction from AI should be a global priority alongside other societal-scale risks such as pandemics and nuclear war.”
We hope this statement will bring AI x-risk further into the overton window and open up discussion around AI’s most severe risks. Given the growing number of experts and public figures who take risks from advanced AI seriously, we hope to improve epistemics by encouraging discussion and focusing public and international attention toward this issue.
When a claim is wrong, ignoring its wrongness and replacing it in your own perception with a corrected steelman of completely different literal meaning is not for the best. The sane thing would be to call out the signatories for saying something wildly incorrect, not pretending that they are saying something they aren't. The sane thing for the signatories would be to mean what they sign, not something others would hear when they read it, despite it contradicting the literal meaning of the words in the statement.