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Comment Transcending to a happy singularity? (Score 1) 76

You wrote: "As useful as capitalism has proved to be, its motivations are primitive and short sighted. How AI is being punted is another example of "bad" capitalism. Bad capitalism has helped wreck the planet more than anything else."

Geoffrey Hinton, as a self-professed socialist, makes a version of your point in the interview previously linked to.

And your point is ultimately the key insight emerging from our discussion, as I reflect on it. AGI or especially ASI may indeed take over someday to humanity's detriment, but that is likely in the future if it happens. What is the biggest threat right now to most humans is other humans developing and using AGI or ASI within a capitalist framework.

I wrote to Ray Kurzweil about something similar back in 2007, responding to a point in one of his books where he was suggesting the best way to quickly get AI was for competitive US corporations to create it. I suggested essentially that AI produced through competition is more likely to have a bad outcome for humanity than AI produced through cooperation. I'd suggest the points there could be said about several current AI entrepreneurs. Someone I sent it to put it up here, and I will include a key excerpt below:
https://heybryan.org/fernhout/...

That said, other systems like, say, in the USSR have their own legacies of, say, environmental destruction and suffering (as with Chernobyl). So Capitalism has not cornered the market on poor risk management -- even though the ideal of any capitalist enterprise is to privatize gains while socializing risks and costs.

Here is one book of many I've collected on improving organizations (maybe of tangential relevance if you are thinking about organization improvement for your project):
"Reinventing Organizations: A Guide to Creating Organizations Inspired by the Next Stage of Human Consciousness" by Frédéric Laloux
https://github.com/pdfernhout/...
"Reinventing Organizations is a radical book, in the sense that radical means getting to the root of a problem. Drawing on works by other writers about organizations and human development, Frédéric Laloux paints a historical picture of moving through different stages of organizational development which he labels with colors. These stages are:
* Red (impulsive, gang-like, alpha male)
* Amber (conformist, pyramidal command and control)
* Orange (achievement, mechanistic, scarcity-assuming, cross-functional communications across a pyramid)
* Green (pluralistic, inverted pyramid with servant leadership and empowered front line)
* Teal (evolutionary, organic, abundance-assuming, self-actualized, self-organizing, purpose-driven)."

Maybe we as a society need to become Teal overall -- or at least Green -- if we are to prosper with AI?

Good talking to you too, same.

--------- From book-review-style email to Ray Kurzweil in 2007

To grossly simplify a complex subject, the elite political and economic culture Kurzweil finds himself in as a success in the USA now centers around maintaining an empire through military preparedness and preventive first strikes, coupled with a strong police state to protect accumulated wealth of the financially obese. This culture supports market driven approaches to supporting the innovations needed to support this militarily-driven police-state-trending economy, where entrepreneurs are kept on very short leashes, where consumers are dumbed down via compulsory schooling, and where dissent is easily managed by removing profitable employment opportunities from dissenters, leading to self-censorship. Kurzweil is a person now embedded in the culture of the upper crust economically of the USA's military and economic leadership. So, one might expect Kurzweil to write from that perspective, and he does. His solutions to problems the singularity pose reflect all these trends -- from promoting first strike use of nanobots, to design and implementation facilitated through greed, to widespread one-way surveillance of the populace by a controlling elite.

But the biggest problem with the book _The Singularity Is Near: When Humans Transcend Biology_ is Kurzweil seems unaware that he is doing so. He takes all those things as given, like a fish ignoring water, ignoring the substance of authors like Zinn, Chomsky, Domhoff, Gatto, Holt, and so on. And that shows a lack of self-reflection on the part of the book's author. And it is is a lack of self-reflection which seems dangerously reckless for a person of Kurzweil's power (financially, politically, intellectually, and persuasively). Of course, the same thing could be said of many other leaders in the USA, so that he is not alone there. But one expects more from someone like Ray Kurzweil for some reason, given his incredible intelligence. With great power comes great responsibility, and one of those responsibilities is to be reasonably self-aware of ones own history and biases and limitations. He has not yet joined the small but growing camp of the elite who realize that accompanying the phase change the information age is bringing on must be a phase change in power relationships, if anyone is to survive and prosper. And ultimately, that means not a move to new ways of being human, but instead a return to old ways of being human, as I shall illustrate below drawing on work by Marshall Sahlins. ...

One of the biggest problems as a result is Kurzweil's view of human history as incremental and continual "progress". He ignores how our society has gone through several phase changes in response to continuing human evolution and increasing population densities: the development of fire and language and tool-building, the rise of militaristic agricultural bureaucracies, the rise of industrial empires, and now the rise of the information age. Each has posed unique difficulties, and the immediate result of the rise of militaristic agricultural bureaucracies or industrialism was most definitely a regression in standard of living for many humans at the time. For example, studies of human skeleton size, which reflect nutrition and health, show that early agriculturists were shorter than preceding hunter gathers and showed more evidence of disease and malnutrition. This is a historical experience glossed over by Kurzweil's broad exponential trend charts related to longevity which jumps from Cromagnon to industrial era. Yes, the early industrial times of Dickens in the 1800s were awful, but that does not mean the preceding times were even worse -- they might well have been better in many ways. This is a serious logical error in Kurzweil's premises leading to logical problems in his subsequent analysis. It is not surprising he makes this mistake, as the elite in the USA he is part of finds this fact convenient to ignore, as it would threaten the whole set of justifications related to "progress" woven around itself to justify a certain unequal distribution of wealth. It is part of the convenient ignorance of the implications that, say, the Enclosure acts in England drove the people from the land and farms that sustained them, forcing them into deadly factory work against their will -- an example of industrialization creating the very poverty Kurzweil claims it will alleviate.

As Marshall Sahlins shows, for most of history, humans lived in a gift economy based on abundance. And within that economy, for most food or goods people families or tribes were mainly self-reliant, drawing from an abundant nature they had mostly tamed. Naturally there were many tribes with different policies, so it is hard to completely generalize on this topic -- but certainly some did show these basic common traits of that lifestyle. Only in the last few thousand years did agriculture and bureaucracy (e.g. centered in Ancient Egypt, China, and Rome) come to dominate human affairs -- but even then it was a dominance from afar and a regulation of a small part of life and time. It is only in the last few hundred years that the paradigm has shifted to specialization and an economy based on scarcity. Even most farms 200 years ago (which was where 95% of the population lived then) were self-reliant for most of their items judged by mass or calories. But clearly humans have been adapted, for most of their recent evolution, to a life of abundance and gift giving.

When you combine these factors, one can see that Kurzweil is right for most recent historical trends, with this glaring exception, but then shows an incomplete and misleading analysis of current events and future trends, because his historical analysis is incomplete and biased. ...

So, this would suggest more caution approaching a singularity. And it would suggest the ultimate folly of maintain[ing] R&D systems motivated by short term greed to develop the technology leading up to it. But it is exactly such a policy of creating copyright and patents via greed that (the so called "free market" where paradoxically nothing is free) that Kurzweil exhorts us to expand. And it is likely here where his own success most betrays him -- where the tragedy of the approach to the singularity he promotes will results from his being blinded by his very great previous economic success. If anything, the research leading up to the singularity should be done out of love and joy and humor and compassion -- with as little greed about it if possible IMHO. But somehow Kurzweil suggests the same processes that brought us the Enron collapse and war profiteering through the destruction of the cradle of civilization in Iraq are the same ones to bring humanity safely thorough the singularity. One pundit, I forget who, suggested the problem with the US cinema and TV was that there were not enough tragedies produced for it -- not enough cautionary tales to help us avert such tragic disasters from our own limitations and pride.

Kurzweil's rebuttals to critics in the last part of the book primarily focus on those who do do not believe AI can work, or those who doubt the singularity, or the potential of nanotechnology or other technologies. One may well disagree with Kurzweil on the specific details of the development of those trends, but many people beside him, including before him, have talked about the singularity and said similar things. Of the fact of an approaching singularity, there is likely little doubt it seems, even as one can quibble about dates or such. But the very nature of a singularity is that you can't peer inside it, although Kurzweil attempts to do so anyway, but without enough caveats or self-reflection. So, what Ray Kurzweil sees in the mirror of a reflective singularity is ultimately a reflection of -- Ray Kurzweil and his current political beliefs.

The important thing is to remember that Kurzweil's book is a quasi-Libertarian/Conservative view on the singularity. He mostly ignores the human aspects of joy, generosity, compassion, dancing, caring, and so on to focus on a narrow view of logical intelligence. His antidote to fear is not joy or humor -- it is more fear. He has no qualms about enslaving robots or AIs in the short term. He has no qualms about accelerating an arms race into cyberspace. He seems to have an significant fear of death (focusing a lot on immortality). The real criticisms Kurzweil needs to address are not the straw men which he attacks (many of whom are being produced by people with the same capitalist / militarist assumptions he has). It is the criticisms that come from those thinking about economies not revolving around scarcity, or those who reflect of the deeper aspects of human nature beyond greed and fear and logic, which Kurzweil needs to address. Perhaps he even needs to addres them as part of his own continued growth as an individual. To do so, he needs to intellectually, politically, and emotionally move beyond the roots that produced the very economic and political success which let his book become so popular. That is the hardest thing for any commercially successful artist or innovator to do. It is often a painful process full of risk. ...

I do not intend to vilify Kurzweil here. I think he means well. And he is courageous to talk [a]bout the singularity and think about ways to approach it to support the public good. His early work on music equipment and tools for the blind are laudable. So was his early involvement with Unitarians and social justice. But somewhere along the line perhaps his perspective has become shackled by his own economic success. To paraphrase a famous quote, perhaps it is "easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than a rich man to comprehend the singularity." :-) I wish him the best in wrestling with this issue in his next book.

Comment Echoing your complex systems & adaptations poi (Score 1) 49

Good points on complex systems and adaptations. Thanks! I hope you are right overall on that in practice -- especially about AI-co-designed biowarfare agents not being a huge issue versus Eric Schmidt's point on the "Offense Dominant" nature of such.

And advanced computing can otherwise indeed do a lot of good in health care. For example:
"Taking the bite out of Lyme disease: New studies offer insight into disease's treatment, lingering symptoms"
https://news.northwestern.edu/...
"Northwestern scientists identified that piperacillin, an antibiotic in the same class as penicillin, effectively cured mice of Lyme disease at 100-times less than the effective dose of doxycycline. At such a low dose, piperacillin also had the added benefit of "having virtually no impact on resident gut microbes," according to the study.
        The team screened nearly 500 medicines in a drug library, using a molecular framework to understand potential interactions between antibiotics and the Borrelia bacteria. Once the group had a short list of potentials, they performed additional physiological, cellular and molecular tests to identify compounds that did not impact other bacteria.
        The authors argue that piperacillin, which has already been FDA-approved as a safe treatment for pneumonia, could also be a candidate for preemptive interventions for those potentially exposed to Lyme (with a known deer tick bite).
        They found that piperacillin exclusively interfered with the unusual cell wall synthesis pattern common to Lyme bacteria, preventing the bacteria from growing or dividing and ultimately leading to its death."

Tangential on dealing with antibiotic resistance using phages as an are people have explored in the past and are re-exploring now in response to current issues: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

And rising CO2 levels and related climate change might be limited compared to worse case predictions if we continue to switch over to solar power and so on.
https://theroundup.org/solar-p...
"The world's current solar energy capacity is 850.2 GW (gigawatts). This is the maximum amount of energy that all global solar installations combined can produce at any one time. This figure has increased every year for the last decade and is more than ten times higher than it was in 2011, according to the latest data from IRENA and Ember."

If we have just one more decade or so of a 10X increase then much of our power will come from renewables instead of fossil fuels. And part of that growth is no doubt a response to earlier worries like about peak oil and global climate change -- to echo your point on ongoing responsive adaptations in complex systems.

So, a bunch of hopeful news is out there too when we look for it reflecting your point on responsiveness. Thanks for sharing your optimism about humanity's resilience.

Comment Choose protocol before choosing implementation (Score 2) 30

An adversary can coerce a proprietary software producer to compromise the code. That's what we're going to see here.

An adversary cannot time-travel to when a protocol was invented, and compromise the protocol. (Though I guess the NSA can come kind of close to that, by "helping" as it's being developed, w/out the time-travel part.) That's what we're not going to see here.

Ergo, proprietary apps will remain unable to provide secure messaging, but secure messaging will remain available to people who want it.

Comment Re:How many of those jobs (Score 1) 60

"TI already produces huge amounts of ICs in Texas"

The QC in Texas must be absolute ass. One customer of mine uses a 10-pin LED driver IC from TI on the BOM. The piece of shit blows itself out fresh off the reel one out of every roughly 20 times. You aren't even pulling a full fucking amp at 48V and this thing rockets off the board, taking traces and pads with it.

No, there isn't a short. On the boards where the pads and traces survive, replacing the IC (usually) fixes the issue.

Comment Re:Another video going around... (Score 2) 98

The whole of Slashdot is pretty pointless, even.

It is not like Boeing of the NTSB are going to come here to get the facts!

However, it occupies our minds when we have better things to do - which is important for nerds as a form of relaxation.

If you are not a nerd, you are probably on the wrong website. Try Twitter!

Comment Re:RAt and most likely APU as well (Score 1) 98

Although the fuel pumps are redundant - there are six - during take-off, all fuel is drawn from a single belly tank!!!

Fuel contamination is thus a very likely cause of loss of power in both engines.

Water in the fuel can come from condensation as (during a previous flight) the plane's tanks fill with air as fuel is burned, and this air will likely be very humid if the decent goes through clouds.

The water would sit in sumps in the tanks which should be drained. My guess is that rotation could have caused this water to get out of the sumps, and into the pump lines.

This type of pollution might have been entirely consumed quite quickly, and the engines begun to resume power causing a slight surge in the final seconds, which some observers claim to have noticed - including the sole survivor.

Alternatively, on refuelling, tankers could have been used which had a small amount of a different type of fuel (gasolene or kerosene) - which could have dissolved in jet fuel, and would have burned but producing significantly less power.

The fact that, on crashing, there was a huge fireball, needs to be investigated. If the engines had had a flameout, it is unlikely that jet fuel would have gone up like that - it is essentially Diesel, and you need a blowtorch (or engines still running) to light it. Fire would likely occur, but an instant fireball like we saw is less likely. If there was even a small amount of gasolene present, a fireball is certain.

Either way, the data recording black box will reveal all.

I assume the idea of feeding both engines from the same tank during take-off was the work of Baldrick.

Comment Re:Sorry I just woke up⦠(Score 3, Interesting) 9

Doesn't ANYBODY but me remember that "Napster" was actually RealNetworks? You know, the old Real.com that was the Internet's first scale, commercial streamer? Real became Rhapsody for several years. Rhapsody had no name recognition, so they bought the Napster name from it's owners... BEST BUY.

It gets weirder. Rhapsody had been Sonos' partner streaming service - and Rhapsody is also... I HEART RADIO. Now the whole Napster lot got dumped in the lap of venture capital vultures.

Comment Was SARS-CoV-2 an example of "harms"? (Score 1) 49

What do you think of the idea that SARS-CoV-2 was perhaps engineered in the USA as a DARPA-funded self-spreading vaccine intended for bats to prevent zoonotic outbreaks in China but then accidentally leaked out when being tested by a partner in Wuhan who had a colony of the bats the vaccine was intended for? More details on the possible "who what when how and why" of all that:
https://dailysceptic.org/2024/...

If true, it provides an example of how dangerous this sort of gain-of-function bio-engineering of viruses can be (even if perhaps well-intended by the people involved). Also on that theme from 2014:
"Threatened pandemics and laboratory escapes: Self-fulfilling prophecies"
https://thebulletin.org/2014/0...
"Looking at the problem pragmatically, the question is not if such escapes will result in a major civilian outbreak, but rather what the pathogen will be and how such an escape may be contained, if indeed it can be contained at all."

My worry with SARS-CoV-2 from the start (working in the biotech industry at the time, including by chance helping track the evolution of SARS-CoV-2) was that so much effort would go into researching the virus and understanding why it was so transmissible and dangerous (mainly to older people) that such knowledge could be misused by humans to make worse viruses. Sadly, AI now accelerates that risk (as in the video I linked to).

Here is Eric Schmidt recently saying essentially the same thing as far as the risk of AI being used to create pathogens for nefarious purposes and how he and others are very worried about it:
"Dr. Eric Schmidt: Special Competitive Studies Project"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

Comment AI and job replacement (Score 1) 76

I don't know if "enthusiastic about the tech" completely describes my feelings about a short-term employment threat and a longer-term existential threat, but, yeah, neat stuff. Kind of maybe like respecting the cleverness and potential dangerous of a nuclear bomb or a black widow spider?

A related story I submitted: "The Workers Who Lost Their Jobs To AI "
https://news.slashdot.org/stor...

Sure maybe there is some braggadocio in Hinton somewhere which we all have. But he just does not come across much that way to me. He seems genuinely somewhat penitent in how he talks. Hinton at age 77 sounds to me more like someone who had an enjoyable career building neat things no one thought he could working in academia who just wants to retire from the limelight (as he says in the video) but feels compelled to spread a message of concern. I could be wrong about his motivation perhaps.

On whether AI exists, I've seen about four decades of things that were once "AI" no longer being considered AI once computers can do the thing (as others before me have commented on first). That has been everything from answering text questions about moon rocks, to playing chess, to composing music, to reading printed characters in books, to recognizing the shape of 3D objects, to driving a car, to now generating videos now, and more.

Example of the last of a video which soon will probably no longer being thought of as involving "AI":
""it's over, we're cooked!" -- says girl that literally does not exist..."
https://www.reddit.com/r/singu...

On robots vs chimps, robots have come a long way since, say, I saw one of the first hopping robots in Marc Raibert's Lab at CMU in 1986 (and then later saw it visiting the MIT Museum with my kid). Example for what Marc Raibert and associates (now Boston Dynamics) has since achieved after forty years of development:
"Boston Dynamics New Atlas Robot Feels TOO Real and It's Terrifying!"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

Some examples from this search:
https://duckduckgo.com/?q=robo...

"I Witnessed the MOST ADVANCED Robotic Hand at CES 2025"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

"Newest Robotic Hand is Sensitive as Fingertips"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

"ORCA: An Open-Source, Reliable, Cost-Effective, Anthropomorphic Robotic Hand - IROS 2025 Paper Video"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

What's going on in China:
"China's First Robot With Human Brain SHOCKED The World at FAIR Plus Exhibition"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

Lots more stuff out there. So if by "long time" on achieving fine motor control you mean by last year, well maybe. :-) I agree with you though that the self-replicating part is still quite a ways off. Inspired by James P. Hogan's "Two faces of Tomorrow" (1978) and NASA's Advanced Automation for Space Missions (1980) I tried (grandiosely) to help with that self-replicating part -- to little success so far:
https://pdfernhout.net/princet...
https://pdfernhout.net/sunrise...
https://kurtz-fernhout.com/osc...

On who will buy stuff, it is perhaps a capitalist version of "tragedy of the commons". Every company thinks they will get the first mover advantage by firing most of their workers and replacing them with AI and robots. They don't think past the next quarter or at best year. Who will pay for products or who will pay unemployed workers to survive for decades is someone else's problem.

See the 1950s sci-fi story "The Midas Plague" for some related humor on dealing with the resulting economic imbalance. :-)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
""The Midas Plague" (originally published in Galaxy in 1954). In a world of cheap energy, robots are overproducing the commodities enjoyed by humankind. The lower-class "poor" must spend their lives in frantic consumption, trying to keep up with the robots' extravagant production, while the upper-class "rich" can live lives of simplicity. Property crime is nonexistent, and the government Ration Board enforces the use of ration stamps to ensure that everyone consumes their quotas. ..."

Related on how in the past the Commons were surprisingly well-managed anyway:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
"In Governing the Commons, Ostrom summarized eight design principles that were present in the sustainable common pool resource institutions she studied ... Ostrom and her many co-researchers have developed a comprehensive "Social-Ecological Systems (SES) framework", within which much of the still-evolving theory of common-pool resources and collective self-governance is now located."

Marc Andreessen might disagree with some of those principles and have his own?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
"The "Techno-Optimist Manifesto" is a 2023 self-published essay by venture capitalist Marc Andreessen. The essay argues that many significant problems of humanity have been solved with the development of technology, particularly technology without any constraints, and that we should do everything possible to accelerate technology development and advancement. Technology, according to Andreessen, is what drives wealth and happiness.[1] The essay is considered a manifesto for effective accelerationism."

I actually like most of what Marc has to say -- except he probably fundamentally misses "The Case Against Competition" and why AI produced through capitalist competition will likely doom us all:
https://www.alfiekohn.org/arti...
"Children succeed in spite of competition, not because of it. Most of us were raised to believe that we do our best work when weâ(TM)re in a race -- that without competition we would all become fat, lazy, and mediocre. Itâ(TM)s a belief that our society takes on faith. Itâ(TM)s also false."

I agree AI can be overhyped. But then I read somewhere so were the early industrial power looms -- that were used more as a threat to keep wages down and working conditions poor using the threat that otherwise the factory owners would bring in the (expensive-to-install) looms.

Good luck and have fun with your project! Pessimistically, it perhaps it may have already "succeeded" if just knowing about it has made company workers nervous enough that they are afraid to ask for raises or more benefits? Optimistically though, it may instead mean the company will be more successful and can afford to pay more to retain skilled workers who work well with AI? I hope for you it is more of the later than the former.

Something I posted a while back though on how AI and robotics and provide an illusion of increasing employment by helping one company grow while its competitors shrink: https://slashdot.org/comments....

Or from 2021:
https://www.forbes.com/sites/j...
"According to a new academic research study, automation technology has been the primary driver in U.S. income inequality over the past 40 years. The report, published by the National Bureau of Economic Research, claims that 50% to 70% of changes in U.S. wages, since 1980, can be attributed to wage declines among blue-collar workers who were replaced or degraded by automation."

But in an (unregulated, mostly-non-unionized) capitalist system, what choice do most owners or employees (e.g. you) really have but to embrace AI and robotics -- to the extent it is not hype -- and race ahead?

Well, ignoring owners and employees could also expand their participation in subsistence, gift, and planned transactions as fallbacks -- but that is a big conceptual leap and still does not change the exchange economy imperative. A video and an essay I made on that:
"Five Interwoven Economies: Subsistence, Gift, Exchange, Planned, and Theft"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
"Beyond a Jobless Recovery: A heterodox perspective on 21st century economics"
https://pdfernhout.net/beyond-...

Anyway, I'm probably just starting to repeat myself here.

Comment Makes sense (Score 1) 38

The terminations would follow a previous round of layoffs in May that hit 6,000 people and fell hardest on product and engineering positions, largely sparing customer-facing roles like sales and marketing.

If you got rid of the people who produce the product you don't have a need for people to sell the product.

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