The Case Against the AI Singularity, By Brian Simpson

       A post by "Curmedgeon's Corner," a name to protect his position in the IT/AI industry, makes a sustained case against the position of Ray Kurzweil, who in his latest take on an older theme, proclaims as his new book title that The Singularity is Nearer: When We Merge with AI (2024). The idea here is that AI will achieve human levels of intelligence by 2030, and then superintelligence in a few years after that. "We" will connect our brains to AI, emerging with it and becoming able to overcome mortality, something Kurzweil seems particularly scared of. But he never tells us who the "we" is on this; will the poor of Africa living on a few dollars a day, without clean and safe water, be in this AI dream? Don't bet on it, the AI immortality will be just for the globalist elites.

In any case, in the extract below he takes the arguments Kurzweil gives, based upon projections of technological advances, apart. Alternative data indicates that this technological optimism is way off; thus reliance upon the increased volume of scientific papers published does not establish much, as most papers are "irreproducible junk" anyway. And that is good to know. Still, such careless optimism keeps the AI bubble from busting, just yet: https://www.forbes.com/sites/bernardmarr/2024/08/07/is-the-ai-bubble-about-to-burst/

https://www.aporiamagazine.com/p/the-singularity-isnt-near

"I bought a copy of Ray Kurzweil's The Singularity is Near in 2006. I remember being amazed by graph after graph showing what looked like exponential growth across different sectors of innovation. All of this was presented as evidence of the Law of Accelerating Returns, which states the following. If you try to forecast technological change using models that assumes linear growth you will always underestimate the rate of change. In other words, the future is coming faster than you think. Kurzweil's inspiration for this was Moore's Law (named after Intel co-founder Gordon Moore), which refers to the approximate doubling of transistor counts every two years.

If you substitute price per bit for transistor count on the y-axis, you end up with a similar looking plot. Source.

Kurzweil's "law" builds on this by attempting to generalise this trend to other sectors (such as nanotech and biotech). The idea being that innovation feeds into more innovation via a positive feedback loop. Every time innovation hits a stumbling block someone innovates a way around this, leading to ever more innovation. Kurzweil makes his case using a variety of measures including the observation that machine parts (such as transistors) and mechanical devices have all been shrinking over the years. He also uses growth in patent numbers to demonstrate "expnential" growth across the board.

Make no mistake, Kurzweil thinks of these trends as exponential. In a 2001 essay titled 'The Law of Accelerating Returns', he states:

The "returns," such as chip speed and cost-effectiveness, also increase exponentially. There's even exponential growth in the rate of exponential growth.

So his model is not just exponential but exponentially exponential. The key trend for Kurzweil is illustrated below.

Here we see that in order to emulate a "brain" of the most "basic" sort, all we need is sufficient computing power (scaled in this case as calculations per second per $1K). Moreover, we appear to be ahead of schedule: since 2006, we have been able to emulate various aspects of the mouse brain. Emulating a human brain is something we should be capable of doing right about now (give or take a couple of years). And putting everybody into the Cloud should be possible by the middle of this century.

When everybody has achieved oneness with their iPhones then there should be no limits whatsoever to what we can do. We will simply be able to rewrite our "base code" and "bootstrap" ourselves into infinity. This is the Kurzweilian Singularity – the term "Singularity" having apparently been coined in this context by physicist John von Neumann. It was subsequently popularised by science fiction writer and mathematician Vernor Vinge in his 1993 essay 'The Coming Technological Singularity'.

One of the big appeals of Kurzweil's belief is that we may avoid being "Skyneted" by an AI of our own creation whose loyalties err on the side of office equipment rather than humanity. In this scenario, we essentially become Skynet. Unsurprisingly, Kurzweil's claims regarding the "computability" of the mind, and the assumptions that go into this, have been roundly criticised by people who actually (kind of) know what they are talking about.

Singularity via accelerating returns is but one relatively benign version of the concept. You might even call it a source of existential hope – this being the (relatively) newly minted antonym to Bostrom's notion of existential risk.

The alternative is the intelligence explosion version. In this scenario, we do get Skyneted by AGI. The "post-human" intelligence then rapidly "bootstraps" itself into nirvana (possibly taking out rival extra-terrestrial intelligences on the way there – von Neuman probe style). The "progress" growth pattern for a machine intelligence explosion is more stepwise than exponential: one moment you are out grilling and the next you have been reduced to a utility fog. It is this version of the Singularity that the likes of Eliezier Yudkowsky lay awake at night worrying about. Again, those who seem to know better are nonplussed by such predictions.

How likely is any of the above? Basically, not very. I previously described how LLM problem solving differs from human problem solving. Humans can do neat things like abstraction. LLMs are essentially just a sophisticated version of Google autocomplete. So there is little risk of one suddenly coming alive and spoiling your (and everyone else's) day.

The basic claims being made by Kurzweil do on the other-hand seem to be based on actual data. Patents numbers are increasing geometrically year-on-year – as are scientific papers. This is true even for very niche topics. A 2018 paper found the number of publications on biochar per year had increased more than fivefold since 1998.

The problem with relying on these sorts of scientific outputs metrics is that a great many papers published in scientific journals are irreproducible junk. The same goes for patents. Much of the apparent explosion in patents is driven by junk patents – which wouldn't withstand any kind of serious scrutiny if challenged. As Michael Park and colleagues noted in a recent Nature article, "papers and patents are becoming less disruptive over time". Their graph of these trends is displayed below, based on a sample size of 45 million publications and 3.9 million patents.

According to the researchers themselves, "our results suggest that slowing rates of disruption may reflect a fundamental shift in the nature of science and technology." Which is a nice, polite, academic way of saying "there are too many damn people running around calling themselves scientists these days". Add to this the fact that when you adjust the disruptive innovation rate (i.e. referring to innovations that are important enough to be noted in more than one history book) on a per capita basis, there appears to be a decidedly anti-Kurzweilian downward trend.

Things aren't looking to rosy for Kurzweil – US patent rates are actually in decline. Source.

What caused this apparent reversal of our collective fortunes? Probably the best explanation can be found in Tyler Cowen's book The Great Stagnation. His basic argument is that we hit a technological plateau when we ran out of "low hanging fruit" to pick. All the easy-to-invent things have already been invented, and the things that are left to invent are becoming increasing tricky. Now we are running on fumes, so to speak.

Think of a disruptive innovation as being like an aging cow. Buying the cow makes a huge difference to your bottom line (now you have dairy products to sell). As it ages, however, it produces less and less. There is a process of diminishing returns. The first nuclear reactor went critical on the 2nd of December 1942. Since then, the basics of reactor design have changed little.

So what does all this mean? Well, if we are running out of things to invent, then we simply have to make greater use of the things that we've already invented. Which seems to be the way of the world at present. Cowen thinks that we should raise the social status of scientists – but this is probably a bad idea. In concrete terms, it almost certainly means that you will never be able to put your brain into your computer. On the flip side, it also means that you're unlikely to be turned into computronium any time soon."

"Computronium" is defined as computable matter.

Record UK Immigration; Living Standard Crash

By Richard Miller (Europe)

The UK Office for National Statistics (ONS) has released data which shows that the UK standard of living has fallen, with mass immigration destroying the small gains in economic growth. Real GDP per head decreased by 0.3 percent between April and June 2024, compared to the same period in 2023. Net migration reached a near-record 685,000, which is getting to the level of insanity of Australia's Great White Replacement program as James Reed calls it.

According to Paul Dales, chief UK economist at Capital Economics: "You have had the population growing at a faster rate than GDP. That increase in the population was almost entirely due to fairly rapid rates of inward migration.

"It suggests living standards are not really improving that much. The increase in GDP we have seen is by and large just because there are more people in the country. But on a per person or household basis, there is not any more income to go around. It is a bit worrying."

The UK government's answer, as seen across the West, is to double down and just increase immigration. After all, if the people protest against the multicultural fascist state, which is what the UK now is, lawfare and the UK Stasi, once police, will take care of them. The jails have been emptied of dangerous (coloured?) criminals to make way for White British protesters: https://news.sky.com/story/uk-riots-more-than-500-new-prison-places-released-to-deal-with-those-behind-disorder-13191726.

 

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Friday, 22 November 2024

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