| ▲ | Diggsey 17 hours ago | |
> Yes, and the amount of study and knowledge required had a tendency to filter out people with the inclination to do such things. The Venn diagrams weren't completely empty, but they were close, which is why such incidents were rare. People do exercise their freedom and do terrible things all the time - it's not rare. There are lots of ways to cause harm that don't require any study or knowledge at all, we just seem hyper-focused on the possible "sci-fi" consequences of AI for some reason. I would argue the reason people don't go and kill someone (or worse...) even more often than they do is not because it's difficult but because most people have no desire to cause that kind of harm, and because of the consequences to themselves of doing so. So yes: technical difficulty put some kinds of harm out of reach of people, and AI can lower that barrier somewhat, but in the grand scale of "harm people can do" I think it's receiving undue attention. And from a practical standpoint: how do you get from there to arguing that we should set some impossible-to-define threshold of "frontier" at which point it becomes so evil that we need to forcefully delete it from existence? Don't you see the problem with trying to put such black and white restrictions on something that's so inherently amorphous and slippery? (And by definition, if you delete the "frontier" model from existence then the next best model is now "frontier" ad infinitum...) On top of that you have the issue that model weights are just information, so in some sense you're legislating the knowledge that is allowed to exist. That's quite a bit more draconian that current laws which usually focus on what knowledge you can share. | ||