Unmatched in intellect and easy to understand. This is a must read for every technology leader, politician and other leaders in society.
View: piers - page 29
Might turn out to be the most important book of our time
Review from If Anyone Builds It, Everyone Dies →
Here is my highly-condensed version of the book’s argument, which I find convincing. We are a long way off from solving what’s known as the alignment problem. If anyone released artificial superindulgence into the world using anything like our current process, it would almost certainly be misaligned with The interests of humankind. Artificial super intelligence..
You may read this book, and find that you don’t completely agree with it. That is ok. I would be shocked however, if you somehow read this book and felt that the current state of affairs around AI development is acceptable. Everyone should be able to agree, given the points made in this book, that..
Few people realize how insane the current AI situation is — companies are racing to try to make minds smarter than all current people (they are spending more than $100B/yr on it, and more each year); experts, and company leaders, *say* this effort has a more than 10% chance of causing human extinction; and …..
The vision
Review from If Anyone Builds It, Everyone Dies →
A Must Read
Review from If Anyone Builds It, Everyone Dies →
There are things I didn’t like about this book. There are things in the book I disagree with. I’m giving it 5 stars anyway because it’s the first book I’ve read that doesn’t mince words about the reality of the situation. The title may sound like hyperbole, but the thesis of the book is undeniable:..
If you’re an analytical person you’ll likely enjoy the writing style, but there are times when literally was flabbergasted at the number of words wasted on describing something ancillary to the point of the book — 20 solid minutes explain how controlled nuclear fission works to set up brief metaphor. It’s the kind of thing..
Too much speculation of danger with no data driven research backing, and offers only impractical/unimplamentable solutions.
Review from If Anyone Builds It, Everyone Dies →
I’ve been working in the AI space for over three decades and this was a difficult book to actually read all the way through. Not because the content was disturbing and scary, but rather because the arguments rely completely on fictional story telling. There clearly are real risks to the current unfettered AI race accelerating..

