←back to thread

129 points NotInOurNames | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.237s | source
Show context
Aurornis ◴[] No.44065615[source]
Some useful context from Scott Alexander's blog reveals that the authors don't actually believe the 2027 target:

> Do we really think things will move this fast? Sort of no - between the beginning of the project last summer and the present, Daniel’s median for the intelligence explosion shifted from 2027 to 2028. We keep the scenario centered around 2027 because it’s still his modal prediction (and because it would be annoying to change). Other members of the team (including me) have medians later in the 2020s or early 2030s, and also think automation will progress more slowly. So maybe think of this as a vision of what an 80th percentile fast scenario looks like - not our precise median, but also not something we feel safe ruling out.

They went from "this represents roughly our median guess" in the website to "maybe think of it as an 80th percentile version of the fast scenario that we don't feel safe ruling out" in followup discussions.

Claiming that one reason they didn't change the website was because it would be "annoying" to change the date is a good barometer for how seriously anyone should be taking this exercise.

replies(7): >>44065741 #>>44065924 #>>44066032 #>>44066207 #>>44066383 #>>44067813 #>>44068990 #
magicalist ◴[] No.44066207[source]
> They went from "this represents roughly our median guess" in the website to "maybe think of it as an 80th percentile version of the fast scenario that we don't feel safe ruling out" in followup discussions.

His post also just reads like they think they're Hari Seldon (oh Daniel's modal prediction, whew, I was worried we were reading fanfic) while being horoscope-vague enough that almost any possible development will fit into the "predictions" in the post for the next decade. I really hope I don't have to keep reading references to this for the next decade.

replies(3): >>44066794 #>>44070233 #>>44073094 #
1. Ey7NFZ3P0nzAe ◴[] No.44070233[source]
> Hari Seldon is a fictional character in the Foundation series of novels by Isaac Asimov. In his capacity as mathematics professor at Streeling University on the planet Trantor, Seldon develops psychohistory, an algorithmic science that allows him to predict the future in probabilistic terms

- https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hari_Seldon