Book description
Recommended on 1 episode:
Is A.I. the Problem? Or Are We?
If you talk to many of the people working on the cutting edge of artificial intelligence research, youāll hear that we are on the cusp of a technology that will be far more transformative than simply computers and the internet, one that could bring about a new industrial revolution and usher in a utopia ā or perhaps pose the greatest threat in our speciesās history.
Others, of course, will tell you those folks are nuts.
One of my projects this year is to get a better handle on this debate. A.I., after all, isnāt some force only future human beings will face. Itās here now, deciding what advertisements are served to us online, how bail is set after we commit crimes and whether our jobs will exist in a couple of years. It is both shaped by and reshaping politics, economics and society. Itās worth understanding.
Brian Christianās recent book āThe Alignment Problemā is the best book on the key technical and moral questions of A.I. that Iāve read. At its center is the term from which the book gets its name. āAlignment problemā originated in economics as a way to describe the fact that the systems and incentives we create often fail to align with our goals. And thatās a central worry with A.I., too: that we will create something to help us that will instead harm us, in part because we didnāt understand how it really worked or what we had actually asked it to do.
So this conversation is about the various alignment problems associated with A.I. We discuss what machine learning is and how it works, how governments and corporations are using it right now, what it has taught us about human learning, the ethics of how humans should treat sentient robots, the all-important question of how A.I. developers plan to make profits, what kinds of regulatory structures are possible when weāre dealing with algorithms we donāt really understand, the way A.I. reflects and then supercharges the inequities that exist in our society, the saddest Super Mario Bros. game Iāve ever heard of, why the problem of automation isnāt so much job loss as dignity loss and much more.
Books recommended:
- š What To Expect When You're Expecting Robots: The Future of Human-Robot Collaboration by Laura Major, Julie Shah
- š Finite and Infinite Games by James Carse
- š How to Do Nothing: Resisting the Attention Economy by Jenny Odell
- š The Scientist in the Crib: Minds, Brains, And How Children Learn by Alison Gopnik, Andrew N. Meltzoff, Patricia K. Kuhl