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M Flood's avatar

The core assumption I would like to see challenged, because I don't think it's maximally probable, is the "limited number of decision makers" one. That assumption, that decisions about frontier AI policy are made by a limited cadre, itself has sub-assumptions. Notably that the forces that allow a limited number of decision makers to keep making decisions in isolation remain constant.

The counter scenario I want to read is one where the funders of the lab making the breakthrough, due to external economic conditions (cough, cough tariffs, recession, "need to show this actually makes money," etc.) tell the frontier lab to commercialize Agent 2 and devote their compute to serving it, downgrading research. I think this would push the scenario into fresh directions. Notably I think it might push the public reaction over whatever threshold is needed to get regulation and oversight.

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Dave Friedman's avatar

My skepticism surrounds power and infrastructure demands. Wrote about it here: https://open.substack.com/pub/davefriedman/p/the-agi-bottleneck-is-power-not-alignment?r=37ez3&utm_medium=ios

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