On "prepping" personal households for AI doom scenarios

post by coryfklein · 2023-02-28T22:17:17.502Z · LW · GW · 0 comments

Contents

  Financial Planning
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Information abounds on how to prepare for earthquake or similar natural disasters: have pre-packed overnight bags, store extra water on premises, etc. Investing in a few small efforts can result in disproportionately positive outcomes should disaster seek you out.

Can you do the same thing with regards to potential world-ending AI doom scenarios? Timelines get shorter every day, advances are coming faster and faster, and it would seem – dare I say it – rational to actually make personal life changes to prepare your household for what is likely to come.

I have done some initial thinking on this myself, but wanted to provide at least a starting point for ideas and conversation. So first, a few thoughts on standard preparations:

  1. Some preparation is disaster-specific. A tornado safe-room in the cellar is not useful during flooding. Unfortunately, we can't predict what AI FOOM looks like on a personal level, so this category of preparation is difficult to perform.
  2. Some preparation is not disaster-specific and comes from human needs: food, water, shelter. There may be little to no preparation you can do on this front that will matter post-singularity, but the preparation is simple, low-effort, and might be useful. Think standard "prepping" things: stocking fresh water, food storage, blankets, flashlights.

Beyond this is where my certainty – and perhaps committment – wavers.

Financial Planning

Up until this point in my life I've followed standard advice for financial planning. I've been well to-do, and planned to retire early with significant savings. Even so, retirement is 10+ years out. If I discovered today that I had terminal cancer, there are many changes I would make to my lifestyle:

Well I haven't been diagnosed with cancer, but I do assign not insignificant >5% odds to AI FOOM within the next decades. Shouldn't I be applying the above points in some degree? Unfortunately, some of them are large binary choices that are hard to go back on later, and which I would regret if I were wrong. And if I do nothing, I risk squandering the short remaining time left to me.

Some half-baked ideas I have so far include:

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