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 didn't. To be clear, I don't doubt Clippy would be able to kill all humans, given the assumptions the story already makes at that point.
But I seriously doubt it would be able to say "alive" after that, starlink or not.
Is Russia really trying as hard as they can to delete Ukrainian internet? All I've seen is some reports they were knocking out 3G towers (and immediately regretting it because of their poor logistics), but it doesn't seem like they're trying that hard to remove Ukrainian internet infrastructure.
And they're certainly not trying as hard as they possibly could given an apocalyptic scenario, eg they're not deploying nukes all over the world as EMPs.
And in any case, they don't control the cities where the datacenters are. It's not like they can just throw a switch to turn them off.
(Although, empirically speaking, I'm not sure how easy/hard it would be for a single employee to shut down eg AWS us-east-1; seems like something they'd want to guard against)
Oh, yeah, I agree. On the long term, the AI could still succeed.
But the timeline wouldn't look like "Kill all humans, then it's smooth sailing from here", and then clippy has infinite compute power after a month.
It would be more like "Kill all humans, then comes the hard part, as clippy spends the next years bootstrapping the entire economy from rubble, including mining, refining, industry, power generation, computer maintenance, datacenter maintenance, drone maintenance, etc..." With at least the first few months being a race against time as Clippy needs to make sure ever single link of its supply chain stays intact, using only the robots built before the apocalypse, and keeping in mind that the supply chain also needs to be able to power, maintain and replace these robots.
(And keeping in mind that Clippy could basically be killed at any point during the critical period by a random solar storm, though it would be unlikely to happen.)