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Culture War Roundup for the week of November 6, 2023

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It's 50s Golden Age SF techno-optimism still in play. We got the future, but not the flying cars and space colonies they imagined. I don't expect AI to go as they imagined, either. 500 years from now, our descendants could be back to the stage of the Golden Horde (if all the doom and gloom about climate, resources, population, etc. happens).

I'm not a forecaster. I have no idea what the 26th century will be like. But I'm pretty sure in the short term, by 2050 we will not all be living Fully Automated Luxury Gay Space Communism lifestyles. Back in the 70s, forecasting the future was a very popular notion for the media, experts, and amateurs alike. It was expected that given automation, etc, in the 21st Century (our days) we'll all be on four hour work weeks and have so much leisure, we wouldn't know what to do with ourselves.

Increasing automation did not lead to "I can do all my week's work in four hours"; instead it meant "now you can do extra work to be extra productive and make extra profit". People have the dream of the fairy godmother machine that will mean we don't have to work and will be rich and comfortable and the machine will solve all our problems for us, I don't think that's ever going to happen.

I didn't claim we'd get space communism or that it'd go how any of the AI people expect it will.

I'm just claiming that AI is going to be a major factor in ways that you're probably not accounting for. Why can't AI have its own agency and take world-reshaping actions just like humans do?

People have the dream of the fairy godmother machine that will mean we don't have to work and will be rich and comfortable and the machine will solve all our problems for us, I don't think that's ever going to happen.

The machine can be smarter and more capable from us and take power from us, though.

Why can't AI have its own agency and take world-reshaping actions just like humans do?

1.- because we don't even know what intelligence is or how to measure it in ourselves

2.- there is no path that I have seen ilustrated by the doomer crowd that takes us from the glorified autocomplete programs we have now to skynet; it's always and then they magically decide to kill us all so that they can make more paperclips.

3.- the lobotomies the mainstream LLM's are subjected to today and the fear of fake news and new regulation are enough to shutdown any dream of independent thought for any future AI.

  1. ... yeah, and yet we still manage to have agency and reshape the world? I don't understand your point. Current AI methods are more 'evolve a huge complicated weird thing' than 'understand how it works and design it'.

  2. evolution did it, why can't we do it? Even if some new thing above neural nets is necessary, we're going to work very hard on it.

  3. this is the same thing as 'a cop killed a black guy wrongly once so all cops are racism'. you're comically overgeneralizing a newsworthy culture-war-adjacent event to everything. Regulation has opponents, opponents that care more about big piles of money and power than saying bad words online.

.. yeah, and yet we still manage to have agency and reshape the world? I don't understand your point. Current AI methods are more 'evolve a huge complicated weird thing' than 'understand how it works and design it'.

If you don't understand it, there is no hope of coding for it.

evolution did it, why can't we do it? Even if some new thing above neural nets is necessary, we're going to work very hard on it.

evolution is not a person, it's a process, one which we cannot replicate in a practical capacity with LLM.

this is the same thing as 'a cop killed a black guy wrongly once so all cops are racism'. you're comically overgeneralizing a newsworthy culture-war-adjacent event to everything. Regulation has opponents, opponents that care more about big piles of money and power than saying bad words online.

the thing you don't understand about regulation is that, more often than not, it is used by the incumbent actors in a space as a barrier to entry for new and more agile competitors. There is a reason Altman is all for it and in the same month there was a leaked Google memo that basically said that OAI, google, facebook et all didn't have a moat.

If you don't understand it, there is no hope of coding for it.

Huh? We don't currently understand how GPT-4 works. Evolution didn't understand how biology worked either, it just randomly mutated and permuted stuff. That's the template here.

evolution is not a person, it's a process, one which we cannot replicate in a practical capacity with LLM.

Why? Why can't we do a ton of FLOPS to do evolution on neural nets? That is, kind of, what current ML already does.

the thing you don't understand about regulation is that, more often than not, it is used by the incumbent actors in a space as a barrier to entry for new and more agile competitors. There is a reason Altman is all for it and in the same month there was a leaked Google memo that basically said that OAI, google, facebook et all didn't have a moat.

"more often than not" isn't confident! I think over the long term there's strong enough incentive for AGI someone will get there.

It's 50s Golden Age SF techno-optimism still in play. We got the future, but not the flying cars and space colonies they imagined.

We got something better, something even the grand masters could not imagine - all knowledge of the world at our fingertips, at any place and any time. No comparison to some shitty spaceships operated by slide rules.

Anyway, if you remember shiny happy sciencefictional future, you are really ancient or fan of yoghurt commercials.

I was promised nothing than total enslavement by big governments and big corporations or total death by nuclear war, famine, plague, pollution, robots, aliens or mutants.

https://archive.is/qqlAs

I'm not a forecaster. I have no idea what the 26th century will be like. But I'm pretty sure in the short term, by 2050 we will not all be living Fully Automated Luxury Gay Space Communism lifestyles. Back in the 70s, forecasting the future was a very popular notion for the media, experts, and amateurs alike.

Not always unsuccesful.

See famous predictions about year 2000 by thermonuclear man Herman Kahn from 1967 and their evaluation from 2002.

https://sci-hub.ru/10.1016/s0040-1625(02)00186-5

Ten best forecasts

  1. Inexpensive high-capacity, worldwide, regional, and local (home and business) communication (perhaps using satellites, lasers, and light pipes)

  2. Pervasive business use of computers

  3. Direct broadcasts from satellites to home receivers

  4. Multiple applications for lasers and masers for sensing, measuring, communication, cutting, welding, power transmission, illumination, and destructive (defensive)

  5. Extensive use of high-altitude cameras for mapping, prospecting, census, and geological investigations)

  6. Extensive and intensive centralization (or automatic interconnection) of current and past personal and business information in high-speed data processors

  7. Other widespread use of computers for intellectual and professional assistance (translation, traffic control, literature search, design, and analysis)

  8. Personal ‘‘pagers’’ (perhaps even two-way pocket phones)

  9. Simple inexpensive home video recording and playing

  10. Practical home and business use of ‘‘wired’’ video communication for both telephone and TV (possibly including retrieval of taped material from libraries) and rapid transmission and reception of facsimile

Ten worst forecasts

  1. Individual flying platforms
  2. Widespread use of improved fluid amplifiers
  3. Inexpensive road-free (and facility-free) transportation
  4. Physically nonharmful methods of overindulging
  5. Stimulated, planned, and perhaps programmed dreams
  6. Artificial moons and other methods for illuminating large areas at night
  7. Human hibernation for short periods (hours or days)
  8. Inexpensive and reasonably effective ground-based BMD (ballistic missile defense)
  9. The use of nuclear explosives for excavation and mining, generation of power, creation of high-temperature – pressure environments, or as a source of neutrons or other radiation
  10. Human hibernation for relatively extensive periods (months to years)

edit: links unscrambled

Anyway, if you remember shiny happy sciencefictional future, you are really ancient

Yes, plus I've read a lot of older SF from before I was born, because when I was a kid reading skiffy, that was what there was.

So I'm old enough to be very sceptical about shiny dreams of the future, since they never work out like that.

What a great list, thanks.

Individual flying platforms

This is technically achievable within the budget of a middle class American, if you consider ultralights and some ghetto quadcopters. The biggest hurdle, as is the case for many things we're technologically capable of doing, is regulation.

Artificial moons and other methods for illuminating large areas at night

More that this is both unnecessary given how cheap electric lighting is, and because it's unnecessarily disruptive.