In a new manifesto, OpenAI’s Sam Altman envisions an AI utopia – and reveals glaring blind spots. (theconversation.com)
from 101@feddit.org to technology@lemmy.world on 26 Sep 2024 07:58
https://feddit.org/post/3201885

#technology

threaded - newest

breadsmasher@lemmy.world on 26 Sep 2024 08:04 next collapse

People have become dramatically more capable over time; we can already accomplish things now that our predecessors would have believed impossible.

And a select few have massively profited from it while labour produces more and more without increasing compensation

Nougat@fedia.io on 26 Sep 2024 12:14 collapse

He’s using the “exclusive we.”

Alphane_Moon@lemmy.world on 26 Sep 2024 09:02 next collapse

American oligarchs really believe their shit doesn’t smell.

Wooki@lemmy.world on 26 Sep 2024 09:46 collapse

Give it a bit, his empire of hype is burning money and generating very very little income comparatively.

Alphane_Moon@lemmy.world on 26 Sep 2024 11:13 collapse

Oh, I think Altman is smart enough to develop contingency plans to maximize benefits for himself at the peak of the hype and leave someone else holding his bags. He is a grifter, a conman, he will say his grandmother is fat ugly whore is he think he can benefit from it while “managing” the PR impact.

That being said, the contrast between the comically bombastic statements about AI utopia (that clearly benefit him financially) and the teenage-level presentation and research (the topics he brings up is serious, it is not enough to shit out a low effort blog post) is a sight to behold.

Zexks@lemmy.world on 26 Sep 2024 10:38 next collapse

On the progress of humanity over the last 10000+ years

Such a story is seductively simple.

Done. Nothing this person says is worth reading after that bullshit.

SpicyLizards@reddthat.com on 26 Sep 2024 10:52 next collapse

Go back to jail. No pass go

nehal3m@sh.itjust.works on 26 Sep 2024 11:23 next collapse

In 15 words: deep learning worked, got predictably better with scale, and we dedicated increasing resources to it.

Are you sure about that Sam? Because one, you’re the snake oil salesman writing this and I wouldn’t trust you as far as I can throw you, and two, yeah maybe it scales predictably but the prediction is that training the next generation for marginal improvement will cost an exponential 100 billion (and that is taking your Microsoft discount for compute into account). You’re hitting a wall hard and the profits are still not in sight. This avenue of progress is a dead end and Sam knows it, because OpenAI is selling PPU’s instead of stock and looking to Saudi investment. Don’t get stuck with the bag folks, the few thousand days Sam claims to need aren’t survivable.

kn0wmad1c@programming.dev on 26 Sep 2024 13:29 collapse

First of all, you make a great point.

Second of all, that quote made me laugh out loud. “In 15 words”? Why is that even there? I saw Sam sitting there with Word open, cursor blinking at the end of his sentence about how deep learning worked, wondering how to make it more impactful. So he copies the sentence and pastes it into a chatgpt box and asks, “how can I make this hit differently?” and chatgpt, in all it’s gptness, responds: “try counting the number of words in the sentence and throwing that in front.”

ptz@dubvee.org on 26 Sep 2024 12:17 next collapse

In a new manifesto, OpenAI’s Sam Altman…

LOL. I jokingly asked a few days ago if well-adjusted people ever write manifestos, and the answer is still “no”.

Curious_Canid@lemmy.ca on 27 Sep 2024 03:07 next collapse

What scares me is that con men and delusional idiots are the ones making the decisions about AI. Like biological weapons development, this is an area where unintended consequences have the potential to destroy mankind. And it is in the hands of people who have demonstrated that they will fire anyone who wants to slow them down by examining the risks and the underlying ethics of what they are doing.

Altman is the most obviously terrible example of someone who should never be allowed near this technology, but his counterparts at Google, IBM, Apple, and the other tech giants are nearly as bad. They want the fame, money, and power this could bring them. None of them are looking out for the good of humanity as a whole.

I firmly believe that our best hope, at least for the moment, is that general AI is going to take longer than they think. We are not going to achieve it by building more powerful versions of what we have now. It will require something new and different. By the time that breakthrough happens, we need to have responsible people managing it.

Tehdastehdas@lemmy.world on 27 Sep 2024 05:41 collapse

the good of humanity as a whole

My headcanon is that the Borg in Star Trek began with an AGI with that exact main goal.

beebarfbadger@lemmy.world on 27 Sep 2024 04:16 collapse

“Wouldn’t it be great if everybody gave my AI company money?”

“For doing what?”

“… I don’t follow.”