Threshold Leaps in Advanced Artificial Intelligence

In Russell Blackford & Damien Broderick (eds.), Intelligence Unbound. Wiley. pp. 35–45 (2014-08-11)
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Abstract

Of all possible future agents with greater‐than‐human intelligence, the one that stands out as the most potentially powerful is sophisticated artificial intelligence (AI). An AI might have millions of processors, all of them hundreds of millions of times faster than biological neurons. Historical focus on molecular nanotechnology in the context of explosive AI growth is unfortunate because the use of nanotechnology for mass manufacturing and the creation of rapid infrastructure are so highly speculative. For an AI on a growth tangent, the primary objective would be to bridge from Internet influence to using humans as tools, and eventually to using robots as tools. Robots connected to the Internet could take as much advantage of the full cognitive resources of the core AI as bandwidth and computing budgets permit. This chapter contributes a concrete model of self‐improving AI that provokes further thought.

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