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henophilia · 2025-02-19T20:42:10.918Z · comments (2)
We would obviously have to significantly streamline the process, such that people are executed within 6 months of being caught or so.
This is one of the biggest hurdles, IMO. How do you significantly streamline the process without destroying due process? In the US, this would require a complete overhaul of the criminal justice system to be feasible.
lgs on How to Make SuperbabiesYour OP is completely misleading if you're using plain GWAS!
GWAS is an association -- that's what the A stands for. Association is not causation. Anything that correlates with IQ (eg melanin) can show up in a GWAS for IQ. You're gonna end up editing embryos to have lower melanin and claiming their IQ is 150
thane-ruthenis on Vladimir_Nesov's ShortformSo the rumors about GPT-5 in late May 2025 either represent change in the naming convention
In both ChatGPT and our API, we will release GPT-5 as a system that integrates a lot of our technology, including o3. We will no longer ship o3 as a standalone model.
I think he's pretty plainly saying that this "GPT-5" will be a completely different thing from a 100x'd GPT-4.
archimedes on How might we safely pass the buck to AI?I think the misunderstanding came from Eliezer's reference to a perpetual motion machine. The point was that people suggesting how to build them often have complicated schemes that tend to not adequately address the central difficulty of creating one. That's where the analogy ends. From thermodynamics, we have strong reasons to believe such a thing is not just difficult but impossible whereas we have no corresponding theory to rule out verifiably safe AI.
Habryka's analogy to nuclear reactor plans is similar except we know that building one of those is difficult but actually possible.
james-camacho on The case for the death penaltySo, you're making two rather large claims here that I don't agree with.
When you look at the history of societies that punish people by mutilation, you find that mutilation goes hand in hand (no pun intended) with bad justice systems--dictatorship, corruption, punishment that varies between social classes, lack of due process, etc.
This seems more a quirk of scarcity than due to having a bad justice system. Historically, it wasn't just the tryannical, corrupt governments that punished people with mutlation, it was every civilization on the planet! I think it's due to a combination of (1) hardly having enough food and shelter for the general populace, let alone resources for criminals, and (2) a lower-information, lower-trust society where there's no way to check for a prior criminal history, or prevent them from committing more crimes after they leave jail. Chopping off a hand or branding them was a cheap way to dole out punishment and warn others to be extra cautious in their vicinity.
Actual humans aren't capable of implementing a justice system which punishes by mutilation but does so in a way that you could argue is fair.
Obviously it isn't possible for imperfectly rational agents to be perfectly fair, but I don't see why you're applying this only to a mutalitive justice system. This is true of our current justice system or when you buy groceries at the store. The issue isn't making mistakes, the issue is the frequency of mistakes. They create an entropic force that pushes you out of good equilibriums, which is why it's good to have systems that fail gracefully.
I don't see what problems mutilative justice would have over incarcerative. We could have the exact same court procedures, just change the law on the books from 3–5 years to 3–5 fingers. Is the issue that bodily disfigurement is more visible than incarceration? People would have to actually see how they're ruining other people's lives in retribution? Or are you just stating, without any justification, that when we move from incarceration to mutilation, our judges, jurors, and lawyers will suddenly become wholly irrational beings? That it's just "human nature"? To put it in your words: that opinion is bizarre.
archimedes on How might we safely pass the buck to AI?Using something as a validation metric to iterate methods doesn’t cause overfitting at anything like the level of directly training on it.
Validation is certainly less efficient at overfitting but it seems a bit like using an evolutionary algorithm rather than gradient descent. You aren't directly optimizing according to the local gradient, but that doesn't necessarily mean you'll avoid Goodharting--just that you're less likely to immediately fall into a bad local optimum.
The likelihood of preventing Goodharting feels like it depends heavily on assumptions about the search space. The "validation" filters the search space to areas where scheming isn't easily detectable, but what portion of this space is safe (and how can we tell)? We don't actually have a true globally accurate validator oracle--just a weak approximation of one.
stephen-fowler on Thermodynamic entropy = Kolmogorov complexityThese recordings I watched were actually from 2022.
shankar-sivarajan on The case for the death penaltyDo you have an example in mind of a legal system that doesn't have "corruption, punishment that varies between social classes, lack of due process, etc."?
danielechlin on On OverconfidenceI know I'm writing in 2025 but this is the first Codex piece I didn't like. People don't know about or like AI experts so they ignore them like all us rationalists ignore astrology experts. There's no fallacy. There's a crisis in expert trust, let's not try to conflate that with people's inability to distinguish between 1% and 5% chances.
jiro on The case for the death penaltyI would agree that eight years of imprisonment can be as bad or worse as mutilation. But the problem is that punishing people by mutilation has different incentives than punishing them with jail--at least among actual human punishers. When you look at the history of societies that punish people by mutilation, you find that mutilation goes hand in hand (no pun intended) with bad justice systems--dictatorship, corruption, punishment that varies between social classes, lack of due process, etc. Actual humans aren't capable of implementing a justice system which punishes by mutilation but does so in a way that you could argue is fair.