| ▲ | stratos123 11 hours ago | |
These arguments have been going on for more than a decade and have been silly the whole time. > It reminds me of the 'Einstein's superintelligent cat' refutation to such fallacies. One (of the many) problem(s) with this "refutation" is that in reality not only does nobody bother to lock the superintelligent cat in room and leave it no available actions, but you're lucky if they don't hook the cat up directly to the internet. It doesn't matter whether you could maybe control a superintelligence, if you were very careful and treating it very seriously, when nobody is even trying, much less being very careful. | ||