sarker
competency crisis actor
Suddenly I cannot remember the color of your eyes
Or the things we said as we stood together for the last time
User ID: 636
I also work on AI. There's wide agreement that AI capabilities can be dangerous in the wrong hands unless the AI is aligned. We are now entering the time of AI actually being good at detecting security vulnerabilities in software. In the long run, firms will deploy their own AIs to probe their systems and keep ahead of attackers, but it would have been irresponsible for Anthropic to release a fully capable Mythos-powered zero day factory with no guardrails publicly without working with companies to address their security holes first.
In the medium term, I expect AIs will improve significantly in biological capabilities. It would be really quite bad if Kimi K7 helped some psycho develop a synthetic plague that killed a bunch of people, and it's worth taking steps to prevent such an outcome.
These are basic safety arguments that have been done to death that do not even require superintelligence, superpersuasion, or even a "will" on the part of the AI.
Anthropic's insistence on acting as a priesthood completely undermines their entirely-speculative case.
But it isn't solely Anthropic, you dismiss all safety concerns regardless of their source because you dismiss AI safety period.
That is quite clearly not what Corvos is arguing. If you have a concrete explanation of what in this regulatory framework doesn't take safety seriously, and what would, I'd be interested to hear it.
If somebody tells you out of the blue that you are going to die of cancer unless you take a 50g zinc tablet every day, it is obviously relevant if he is a travelling zinc salesman!
If somebody believed that there would be terrible consequences for the human race unless everyone took a 50g zinc tablet, could they be anything but a traveling zinc salesman, or a fellow, uh, traveler?
Your opinion is that we can't trust people concerned about AI safety about AI safety because it may increase their status. Okay, who can we trust about AI safety? People unconcerned about AI safety? Seems like epistemic closure to me.
That is, he has hidden his involvement to push his political manifesto whilst pretending to be an interested bystander
I can't honestly believe you think his involvement is "hidden" when he discloses it in the opening section of his first post on the topic.
Their intended solution is to get the two largest countries in the world to get together and fuck up anyone who disagrees with them in ways that would horrify them for literally any other problem except their super-special Millenarian one.
This is already basically how nuclear non-proliferation works, as we've seen in Iran. Again, you can argue about if AI is as dangerous as nuclear weapons, but if you assume arguendo it is, then this is an obviously similar regulatory regime that basically nobody opposes.
Your argument basically boils down to:
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If AI really is dangerous, we would need to take drastic action to avoid bad outcomes.
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Drastic action would be bad.
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Therefore, AI can't be dangerous.
Or perhaps:
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The people who think AI is dangerous are suggesting drastic action.
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Therefore, AI can't be dangerous.
Did they intentionally bypass the cache, or did they not even know about it? It's not hard to believe that clueless programmers don't know that the value is in the cache.
The H1B code monkeys in Mumbai
Perhaps he's wondering why someone would sponsor a man for an H1B before employing him overseas.
It obviously can't be the case that "this increases the power of AI companies that take safety seriously" is an argument against a regulatory regime that takes AI safety seriously. The argument must actually be that AI safety is not a concern, not that even if it is a concern we must still be suicidally unconcerned.
But, on the other hand, did it really change everything? Perhaps not. People still work, get sick, and die, same as they always did. I guess if that changes then we’ll really be in new territory.
Amazing that even the invention of fire didn't 'change everything' by this definition. Tough crowd!
where careless devs don't do even the most basic things to make the computer not have to do the same work twice.
Exactly, because it's basically not worth it outside of actually high performance computing. Who's not going to use a product because it's 20% slower but otherwise better than competitors? Vim is way faster than Microsoft Word, but who cares?
It's especially embarrassing when the shittier way of doing it is harder to write than the non-pessimized way and retarded web dev monkeys do it anyways.
You'll have to provide some examples.
Anthropic's conception of 'mitigating AI risks' is 'do everything I say, just the way I say it, and this system has to be enforced by someone who thinks like me'.
This is a fully general counterargument against any regulation. Even your proposed regime rounds off to "do everything I say the way I say it and it has to be enforced by someone who thinks like me."
If your preferred regulatory regime also excludes almost all your potential competitors except the ones you're basically okay with, then it is indistinguishable from a power grab.
Their stated beliefs on AI dangers, which philosophically long predate Anthropic as a going concern, are entirely consistent with the proposed regime. In fact, it would be contradictory for them to believe in AI risks and argue for laissez-faire. Perhaps you disagree on the risks, but that is the root of the disagreement, not the regulatory framework.
If companies are still employing software engineers (and they all are) then I’d say we’re mostly in “nothing happens” territory.
It is too early to be confident. Many people in FAANG have no idea how to use AI effectively and many others refuse on principle. Massive layoffs (20%+) are unlikely due to reasons of political economy despite the staggering amount of deadwood at these companies. It will take a long time for these ships to turn, we are still in the early stages of diffusion.
But if people are still going to work then, how different are things, really?
People went to work before the industrial revolution and people went to work after. Perhaps your opinion is that "nothing happened" during the industrial revolution; let's say I disagree.
You can, but cars, airplanes and drugs are famous examples of very heavily regulated industries where creating a new business is almost impossible, incumbents rule, and incumbents and their lobbyists design the majority of the regulations themselves.
Creating a new business in these sectors is difficult because the sectors are inherently difficult to make money in. Moderna was founded in 2010 and basically had nothing going on until Covid. SpaceX was founded 2002 and only had a successful launch in 2008 after near bankruptcy. It is nevertheless possible to enter these markets.
If the Trump government had calmly and consistently mandated open weight releases and anti-monopoly legislation, Anthropic would be screaming about how this was unsafe.
I don't see the contradiction here. "You say you want regulatory regime A, but in fact you would hate regulatory regime B which doesn't accomplish the same goals. Curious!" The point is not that Anthropic wants a regulatory regime, they want a regulatory regime that is oriented around mitigating AI risks.
"We will create super-intelligence, and then the thing magically becomes alive just like us, so just like us it will have goals and aims of its own, and we have to make sure it is well-instructed in How To Be Nice Liberal and then it can take care of us like pampered pedigree cats as it colonises the known universe".
How about "we need to make sure the thing doesn't help people develop cyber weapons or biological weapons?"
They want to be the ones deciding who gets to play with the toys and the government tamely follows their instructions as regards shutting down their rivals, but it's not going to work like that.
I don't know why people keep repeating this. From Anthropic:
It is time to go beyond transparency to more serious and binding regulation of AI. I believe the best analogy, at least at the current stage of the exponential, is to cars, airplanes, or drugs—powerful technologies essential to the modern economy, but capable of killing large numbers of people if designed or operated poorly. I therefore believe we should model AI regulation on agencies like the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA). Frontier AI models, like airplanes, should be required to go through technical testing and auditing, and their release should be blocked or reversed as a threat to public safety if they do not meet high standards of safety. I am grateful to see the Trump administration’s Executive Order move incrementally towards a greater role for government in AI, though Anthropic’s proposal recommends even further action.
Does this sound like Anthropic decides who uses their models? Does Ford decide who uses their cars?
Yes, they weren't happy about a schizophrenic and vindictive ban of their model due to capabilities that it shares with other models.
You can be in favor of a consistent regulatory framework without being in favor of arbitrary decisions by the president based on who is in and who is out.
For example, you currently can't simply ask "Hello Mr. Claude the site latency is too high, please fix it,"
Given access to logs, metrics, etc. I expect Claude would in fact be able to fix this.
Capability hits a wall: For the greybeards, nothing happens, for the kids, those who choose the manual route will come out ahead.
We have already exited the "nothing happens" condition given present capabilities. The graybeards are much better off acting in a staff+ capacity using LLMs than writing code themselves. The question of what to do with junior engineers is an interesting one.
That's largely a casualty of Moore's law. There's no point in optimizing candy crush to run on the Apollo guidance computer when nobody is going to run it on hardware like that.
I also agree, though I don't know about the rambliness. SMH could never be accused of being concise. I do feel that the quality of the comments has been worse.
On a lark, I got hy3 (free on openrouter!) to scrape @self_made_human's comments and graph length and score. I don't see a clear trend in length, but it does seem like there's been more comments with zero or negative scores since late 2025/early 2026.
Okay, but infants already have less rights than other people and don't have a say in much of anything, whether they are "sold" or not.
I think it must simply be the case that you are saying something you shouldn't or not saying something you should. You said there's usually a few days of texting, presumably you aren't just repeating "looking forward" every day.
Out of curiosity, how many dates have fallen through since 2019 and how many have actually successfully taken place? Is there any possibility that you are giving them the ick in between the time the date has been set up and the date itself?
I don't know what the infant mortality was in 19th century Quebec, but it basically doesn't matter. Even if it was low, such cultures are the exception rather than the norm over 200,000 years of human history.
I've been told that people meet women at church.
How long do you spend texting these women before meeting up?
Maybe it's time to join a church or something.
It is indeed practically unheard of at the country level.
"The average height of a woman is 5'4""
"I'm 5'6" though"
Seven, much less fourteen children, surviving to adulthood on a regular basis has never been the case. Here is a time series for "effective" fertility rate. For the UK and the US it only goes back to the early 20th century, but for Sweden it goes back to 1751. This has never exceeded 3.5 children in any of these countries.
Obviously there are families that buck the trend, but that doesn't take away from what's normal and what isn't.
The Book of the New Sun is legitimately a masterpiece that probably deserves a volume of similar size for exegesis of all the layers involved.
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At this point there are only two countries with AI models near the frontier. If these countries make a deal that they will not advance their models past a certain capability level and will prevent other powers from doing so, this is much closer to the NLPT than disarmament. Most obviously, it does not entail any reduction in AI capabilities, where disarmament entails a reduction in nuclear capabilities.
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