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Week 12: Regulating Dangerous Technologies

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Week 13: Regulating Dangerous Technologies

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The slides are here: Regulating Dangerous Technologies (I’ve included some slides in the posted slides that I didn’t present in class but you might find interesting, including some excerpts from a talk I gave in 2018 on Mutually Assured Destruction and the Impending AI Apocalypse.)

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Since one of the groups made the analogy to tobacco products, I also will take the liberty of pointing to a talk I gave at Google making a similar analogy: The Dragon in the Room.

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Stephanie made the point after class about how important individuals +making brave decisions is to things working out, in particular with +humanity (so far!) avoiding annihilating ourselves with nuclear +weapons. Stanislav Petrov may well have been the single person between +us and nuclear destruction in 1983, when he prevented an alert (which +he correctly determined was a false alarm) produced by the Soviet +detection system from going up the chain.

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Here’s one (of many) +articles on this: ‘I Had A Funny Feeling in My +Gut’, +Washington Post, 10 Feb 1999. There is still a lot of uncertainty and +skepticism if we should be fearing any kind of out-of-control AI risk, +but it is not so hard to imagine scenarios where our fate will +similarly come down to an individual’s decision at a critical +juncture. (On the other hand, this article argues that we shouldn’t +oversensationalize Petrov’s actions and there were many other +safeguards between him and nuclear war, and we really shouldn’t design +extinction-level systems in a way that they are so fragile to depend on an individual decision: Did Stanislav Petrov save the world in 1983? It’s complicated, from a Russian perspective.)

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Week 13: Regulating Dangerous Technologies