This story was originally posted as a response to this thread.
It might help to imagine a hard takeoff scenario using only known sorts of NN & scaling effects...
In A.D. 20XX. Work was beginning. "How are you gentlemen !!"... (Work. Work never changes; work is always hell.)
Specifically, a MoogleBook researcher has gotten a pull request from Reviewer #2 on his new paper in evolutionary search in auto-ML, for error bars on the auto-ML hyperparameter sensitivity like larger batch sizes, because more can be different and there's high variance in the old runs with a few anomalously high performance values. ("Really? Really? That's what you're worried about?") He can't see why worry, and wonders what sins he committed to deserve this asshole Chinese (given the Engrish) reviewer, as he wearily kicks off yet another HQU experiment...
I am trying to understand if this part was supposed to mock human exceptionalism or if this is the author's genuine opinion. I would assume it's the former, since I don't understand how you could otherwise go from describing various instances of it demonstrating consciousness to this, but there are just too many people who believe that (for seemingly no reason) to be sure. If we define consciousness as simply the awareness of the self, Clippy easily beats humans, as it likely understands every single cause of its thoughts. Or is there a better definition I'm not aware of? It's ability to plan is indistinguishable from humans, and what we call "qualia" is just another part of self awareness, so it seems to tick the box.
I agree it's irrelevant, but I've never actually seen these terms in the context of AI safety. It's more about how we should treat powerful AIs. Are we supposed to give them rights? It's a difficult question which requires us to rethink much of our moral code, and one which may shift it to the utilitarian side. While it's definitely not as important as AI safety, I can still see it causing upheavals in the future.