But I don't understand what he hopes to achieve. I mean its just going to mean that the development they fear so much being done elsewhere.
Also I wonder what they think AI is going to do to us?
Its unlikley that AI is going to kill us, it'll be the civil unrest caused by unemployment.
I think there are paths to substantial architecture improvements-- things resembling edge transformers, things like adding extra tokens sort of like how that is done in vision transformers etc.
For this reason I think employment doomerism isn't very unreasonable. The architectures aren't here-- we simply haven't figured out how to substantially improve the transformer, but it's surely possible.
I myself made experiments recently where I got improved performance on some demanding toy problems. There must be hundreds of people working on this kind of thing, and even if there aren't the general research is building knowledge that will eventually guide people to design better architectures.
A world where you can ask this ChatGPT-17.3 to generate a version control tool with these or that properties, solving some list of problems with previous version control tools, and then it does so over the weekend at the cost of $1000 in GPU rent?
Presumably at the point it will not be sensible to employ very many programmers. A couple of experts would determine requirements and then they would feed that into the machines and the required software, mathematics etc. would be produced, analyzed by a small group of experts and then used to produce requirements for the next version.
Why would transformers be so ideal that there is no major improvement left?
I'm not saying that transformers are ideal or that there's no major improvement left. I'm saying that a major improvement over something that is barely a net positive is nowhere near the extinction level event you're making it seem to be.
It seems obvious that we'll keep building this tech up until the very end.
Every AI coding startup is trying to automate the software engineer and reduce the cost of software, yet engineers fling themselves at the problem.
In the GitHub Copilot AMA today they were practically giddy about it. And in OpenAI Codex's Reddit AMA, they stated the mission was to make the delivery of end-to-end well-defined software a fully solved problem within a decade.
"But what about your own jobs?", people ask.
Crickets.
We're going to be building it until we have no more to contribute. Not a value statement, just a statement of what evidently looks to be the case.
Now I don't personally have a problem with software automation - I'd love to automate myself and do more. I might even be one of the people building the thing. But I have a problem with trillion dollar companies unilaterally owning the means of production and seeing the recursive upside behind a mile-tall moat. I'd never be able to work for company that rivals nation states.
AI will only work for all of us if there is no single, limited set of winners. If there is no moat.
Not sure we'll be so lucky.
You should look into the "business language as a programming" platforms and see how they are doing. Trying to eliminate all IT except for the bare minimum for years and going nowhere. I'm sceptical at all the "AI" companies branding their own product as the panacea. It is all marketing.
Personally I think it’s a. Immoral b. Dangerous and c. Self defeating.
Immoral because deceiving is actually quite bad regardless of your justification.
Dangerous because you will attract true-believers who are neurotic, mentally ill or misguided and really believe what you’re saying as a strategic thing. You will create a movement that you don’t control and is just wrong about the world.
Self-defeating partly for the above reasons but mostly because you may discredit your position with the people who understand “just enough” and those people run many major companies, countries etc.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Overtone https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Window_function
But please also see:
Ovaltime Window: the period where you can drink a hot drink Oval-Time Window: a real window where you can watch cricket in SW London Overdone Window: when food is just perfectly overcooked
Ovaltine Window: You view all politics with distaste because you are drinking a sorry substitute for a cup of tea.
Overtime Window: Rather than continue working extra hours you decide to self-defenestrate
---
Further reading:
Ambrose Bierce - The Devil's Dictionary, https://www.gutenberg.org/files/972/972-h/972-h.htm
Douglas Adams - The Meaning of Liff, https://ia601202.us.archive.org/18/items/calibre_library_76....
I've seen this before haven't I.
fnands•6h ago
Is this news?
actionfromafar•6h ago
(Caveat: if it gets enough traction, it is news. Reference: see the lineup of the current administration.)