The concerns about intelligent, autonomous robots and advanced AI are REAL but drowned out, for the most part, by the industry cheerleading and the curiosity of the public.
We should all be terrified, frankly.
The title below sounds hyperbolic, but . . . every pede should read this. Fixing America and ending the Cabal without stopping something that MANY very smart people believe will KILL US ALL wouldn't be a good idea.
It doesn't take a computer scientist to see the on-coming threat. Warnings have shown up in books and movies for decades:
Dune, set in a universe where "machines that think" have been outlawed after they became a disaster, was published in 1965.
Stanley Kubrick's 1968 film "2001: A Space Odyssey", based on several short stories optioned from Arthur C. Clarke, primarily "The Sentinel" (1951) and "Encounter in the Dawn" (1953), famously tells the story of an AI running a space probe that turns murderous after learning that the crew plans to shut it down. See THIS for a recent, similar real-world example (without the actual murder).
You can probably name a half-dozen or more books and movies with similar themes, such as James Cameron's Terminator (1984).
A great many computer scientists and other intelligent, educated people have been concerned about the problem for years also. But recently the concern has grown as AI has become more powerful AND shown repeatedly that it cannot be precisely controlled -- not a new truth, frankly, given that bugs and unexpected behavior have been common ever since the dawn of programable computing.
As the authors of If Anyone Builds It discuss, AI programming ramps the difficulty of accurately forecasting product behavior up to impossible levels for a variety of reasons.
I am actually pessimistic that the world will slow or halt AI development sufficiently and in time to prevent disaster, but if enough people get this issue on their radar, perhaps we have a chance.
Already happening.
That's where the green tips come into play...
Or black tips.
I dont see an issue here. Only reason to get excited is if you've never heard of leverage.
A car in neutral is not all that difficult to push, and those are ideal conditions.
If it was in park, that is a different story.
Skynet is on the way.
We need some laws to make them put big off buttons on the front of their face.
One punch and they are turned off.
I know the correct spelling is "toe," but I'd be really tempted to use "tow" in this instance🐸
Totally possible and not a big deal. If it is real. Now if the car were in park, that would be a feat.
About the same time when they replace doctors.
I'd get a baseball bat and whack that thing, all while calling it a clanker.
Hopefully Elon makes a version that can’t be hacked and fights for you against them.
Is this what they mean by carbon neutral?
EMP gun
Interesting vid; hadn't seen that before.
The concerns about intelligent, autonomous robots and advanced AI are REAL but drowned out, for the most part, by the industry cheerleading and the curiosity of the public.
We should all be terrified, frankly.
The title below sounds hyperbolic, but . . . every pede should read this. Fixing America and ending the Cabal without stopping something that MANY very smart people believe will KILL US ALL wouldn't be a good idea.
This needs to get on everyone's radar.
If Anyone Builds It, Everyone Dies: Why Superhuman AI Would Kill Us All by Eliezer Yudkowsky and Nate Soares.
It's an excellent read, aside from the sense of dread it creates -- similar, I would imagine, to a terminal cancer diagnosis.
Ending the Cabal and returning sanity to the world won't mean much if AI wrecks the world or even completely exterminates humanity.
And THAT's a very real possibility.
We've KNOWN this was a high-probability on-coming extinction-level event for a LONG time; here's an example:
Our Final Invention: Artificial Intelligence and the End of the Human Era by James Barrat -- published in 2013.
It doesn't take a computer scientist to see the on-coming threat. Warnings have shown up in books and movies for decades:
Dune, set in a universe where "machines that think" have been outlawed after they became a disaster, was published in 1965.
Stanley Kubrick's 1968 film "2001: A Space Odyssey", based on several short stories optioned from Arthur C. Clarke, primarily "The Sentinel" (1951) and "Encounter in the Dawn" (1953), famously tells the story of an AI running a space probe that turns murderous after learning that the crew plans to shut it down. See THIS for a recent, similar real-world example (without the actual murder).
You can probably name a half-dozen or more books and movies with similar themes, such as James Cameron's Terminator (1984).
A great many computer scientists and other intelligent, educated people have been concerned about the problem for years also. But recently the concern has grown as AI has become more powerful AND shown repeatedly that it cannot be precisely controlled -- not a new truth, frankly, given that bugs and unexpected behavior have been common ever since the dawn of programable computing.
As the authors of If Anyone Builds It discuss, AI programming ramps the difficulty of accurately forecasting product behavior up to impossible levels for a variety of reasons.
I am actually pessimistic that the world will slow or halt AI development sufficiently and in time to prevent disaster, but if enough people get this issue on their radar, perhaps we have a chance.
They'll get hacked faster than Biden eats ice cream.