I tend to disagree with most EAs about existential risk from AI. Unfortunately, my disagreements are all over the place. It's not that I disagree with one or two key points: there are many elements of the standard argument that I diverge from, and depending on the audience, I don't know which points of disagreement people think are most important.
I want to write a post highlighting all the important areas where I disagree, and offering my own counterarguments as an alternative. This post would benefit from responding to an existing piece, along the same lines as Quintin Pope's article "My Objections to "We’re All Gonna Die with Eliezer Yudkowsky"". By contrast, it would be intended to address the EA community as a whole, since I'm aware many EAs already disagree with Yudkowsky even if they buy the basic arguments for AI x-risks.
My question is: what is the current best single article (or set of articles) that provide a well-reasoned and comprehensive case for believing that there is a substantial (>10%) probability of an AI catastrophe this century?
I was considering replying to Joseph Carlsmith's article, "Is Power-Seeking AI an Existential Risk?", since it seemed reasonably comprehensive and representative of the concerns EAs have about AI x-risk. However, I'm a bit worried that the article is not very representative of EAs who have substantial probabilities of doom, since he originally estimated a total risk of catastrophe at only 5% before 2070. In May 2022, Carlsmith changed his mind and reported a higher probability, but I am not sure whether this is because he has been exposed to new arguments, or because he simply thinks the stated arguments are stronger than he originally thought.
I suspect I have both significant moral disagreements and significant empirical disagreements with EAs, and I want to include both in such an article, while mainly focusing on the empirical points. For example, I have the feeling that I disagree with most EAs about:
- How bad human disempowerment would likely be from a utilitarian perspective, and what "human disempowerment" even means in the first place
- Whether there will be a treacherous turn event, during which AIs violently take over the world after previously having been behaviorally aligned with humans
- How likely AIs are to coordinate near-perfectly with each other as a unified front, leaving humans out of their coalition
- Whether we should expect AI values to be "alien" (like paperclip maximizers) in the absence of extraordinary efforts to align them with humans
- Whether the AIs themselves will be significant moral patients, on par with humans
- Whether there will be a qualitative moment when "the AGI" is created, rather than systems incrementally getting more advanced, with no clear finish line
- Whether we get only "one critical try" to align AGI
- Whether "AI lab leaks" are an important source of AI risk
- How likely AIs are to kill every single human if they are unaligned with humans
- Whether there will be a "value lock-in" event soon after we create powerful AI that causes values to cease their evolution over the coming billions of years
- How bad problems related to "specification gaming" will be in the future
- How society is likely to respond to AI risks, and whether they'll sleepwalk into a catastrophe
However, I also disagree with points made by many other EAs who have argued against the standard AI risk case. For example, I think that,
- AIs will eventually become vastly more powerful and smarter than humans. So, I think AIs will eventually be able to "defeat all of us combined"
- I think a benign "AI takeover" event is very likely even if we align AIs successfully
- AIs will likely be goal-directed in the future. I don't think, for instance, that we can just "not give the AIs goals" and then everything will be OK.
- I think it's highly plausible that AIs will end up with substantially different values from humans (although I don't think this will necessarily cause a catastrophe).
- I don't think we have strong evidence that deceptive alignment is an easy problem to solve at the moment
- I think it's plausible that AI takeoff will be relatively fast, and the world will be dramatically transformed over a period of several months or a few years
- I think short timelines, meaning a dramatic transformation of the world within 10 years from now, is pretty plausible
I'd like to elaborate on as many of these points as possible, preferably by responding to direct quotes from the representative article arguing for the alternative, more standard EA perspective.
Note that I'm conditioning on AIs successfully taking over which is strong evidence against human success at creating desirable (edit: from the perspective of the creators) AIs.
For an intuition pump, consider future AIs which are trained for the equivalent of 100 million years of next-token-prediction[1] on low quality web text and generated data and then aggressively selected with outcomes based feedback. This outcomes based feedback results in selecting the AIs for carefully tricking their human overseers in a variety of cases and generally ruthlessly pursuing reward.
This scenario is somewhat worse than what I expect in the median world. But in practice I expect that it's at least systematically possible to change the training setup to achieve in predictably better AI motivation and values. Beyond trying to influence AI motivations with crude tools, it seems even better to have humans retain control, use AIs to do a huge amount of R&D (or philosophy work), and then decide what should actually happen with access to more options.
Another way to put this is that I feel notably better about the decisions making of current power structures in the western world and in AIs labs than I feel about going with AI motivations which likely result from training.
More generally, if you are the sole person in control, it seems strictly better from your perspective to carefully reflect on who/what you want to defer to rather than doing this somewhat arbitrarily (this still leaves open the question of how bad arbitrarily defering is).
I'm pretty happy with slow and steady genetic engineering as a handover process, but I would prefer even slower and more deliberate than this. E.g., existing humans thinking carefully for as long as seems to yield returns about what beings we should defer to and then defer to those slightly smart beings which think for a long time and defer to other beings, etc, etc.
Part of my view on aliens or dogs is driven from the principle of "aliens/dogs are in a somewhat similar position to us, so we should be fine with swapping" (roughly speaking) and "the part of my values which seem most dependent on random emprical contingencies about evolved life I put less weight on". These intuitions transfer somewhat less to the AI case.
Current AIs are trained on perhaps 10-100 trillion tokens and if we think 1 token the equivalent of 1 second then (100*10^12)/(60*60*24*365) = 3 milion years.