Much like the end of history wasn’t the end of history
LLM-Attention centric AI isn’t the end of AI development
So if they are successful at locking in it will be at their own demise because it doesn’t cover the infinity many pathways for AI to continue down, specifically intersections with robotics and physical manipulation, that are ultimately way more impactful on society.
Until the plurality of humans on the earth understand that human exceptionalism is no longer something to be taking for granted (and shouldn’t have been) there’s never going to be effective global governance of technology.
> Until the plurality of humans on the earth understand that human exceptionalism is no longer something to be taking for granted (and shouldn’t have been) there’s never going to be effective global governance of technology.
Could you elaborate more on this? FYI fully agreed on the former sentences.
It's hard to read this without being cynical.
How seriously would you take a proposal on car pollution regulation and traffic law updates written by Volkswagen?
> How seriously would you take a proposal on car pollution regulation and traffic law updates written by Volkswagen?
they more or less wrote the EU emission regulations
the only reason diesel cars were sold in huge numbers in the EU
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volkswagen_emissions_scandal
Am I the US Government in this scenario?
they seem to have omitted the scenarios where the newly unemployable electorate turn on them
Much like the end of history wasn’t the end of history
LLM-Attention centric AI isn’t the end of AI development
So if they are successful at locking in it will be at their own demise because it doesn’t cover the infinity many pathways for AI to continue down, specifically intersections with robotics and physical manipulation, that are ultimately way more impactful on society.
Until the plurality of humans on the earth understand that human exceptionalism is no longer something to be taking for granted (and shouldn’t have been) there’s never going to be effective global governance of technology.
> Until the plurality of humans on the earth understand that human exceptionalism is no longer something to be taking for granted (and shouldn’t have been) there’s never going to be effective global governance of technology.
Could you elaborate more on this? FYI fully agreed on the former sentences.