One fairly obvious failure mode is that it has no checks on the other outputs.
So from my understanding, the AI is optimizing it's actions to produce a machine that outputs electricity and helium. Why does it produce a fusion reactor, not a battery and a leaking balloon?
A fusion reactor will in practice leak some amount of radiation into the environment. This could be a small negligible amount, or a large dangerous amount.
If the human knows about radiation and thinks of this, they can put a max radiation leaked into the goal. But this is pushing the work onto the humans.
From my understanding of your proposal, the AI is only thinking about a small part of the world. Say a warehouse that contains some robotic construction equipment, and that you hope will soon contain a fusion reactor, and that doesn't contain any humans.
The AI isn't predicting the consequences of it's actions over all space and time.
Thus the AI won't care if humans outside the warehouse die of radiation poisoning, because it's not imagining anything outside the warehouse.
So, you included radiation levels in your goal. Did you include toxic chemicals? Waste heat? Electromagnetic effects from those big electromagnets that could mess with all sorts of electronics. Bioweapons leaking out? I mean if it's designing a fusion reactor and any bio-nasties are being made, something has gone wrong. What about nanobots. Self replicating nanotech sure would be useful to construct the fusion reactor. Does the AI care if an odd nanobot slips out and grey goos the world? What about other AI. Does your AI care if it makes a "maximize fusion reactors" AI that fills the universe with fusion reactors.
Response to the rest of your post.
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LikeThisCtrlMusedhereNeural sims probably have glitches too. Adversarial examples exist.
This sounds iffy. Like you are eyeballing and curve fitting, when this should be something that falls out of a broader world model.
Every now and then, you get a new tool. Like suppose your medical bot has 2 kinds of mistakes, ones that instant kill, and ones that mutate DNA. It quickly learns not to do the first one. And slowly learns not to do the second when it's patients die of cancer years later. Except one day it gets a gene sequencer. Now it can detect all those mutations quickly.
I find it interesting that most of this post is talking about the hardware.
Isn't this supposed to be about AI? Are you expecting a regieme where
Ok. And there is our weak link. All our robots are going to be sitting around broken. Because the bottleneck is human repair people.
It is possible to automate things. But what you seem to be describing here is the process of economic growth in general.
Each specific step in each specific process is something that needs automating.
You can't just tell the robot "automate the production of rubber gloves". You need humans to do a lot of work designing a robot that picks out the gloves and puts them on the hand shaped metal molds to the rubber can cure.
Yes economic growth exists. It's not that fast. It really isn't clear how AI fits into your discussion of robots.