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Mo Diddly's avatar

“Things take longer to happen than you think they will, and then they happen faster than you thought they could.”

Is this the same as the observation that in general we overestimate how much progress will be made in the short term and underestimate the long-term?

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Richard's avatar

Honoured as I am to be "interestingly wrong", I just don't find the argument "but humans!!" particularly credible as a default argument for why AI systems, which make entirely different and alien types of errors to what people normally expect in complex situations, will always successfully work in the real world. It ignores the fundamentals of how humans work and the social systems we have evolved to work with each other, within which AI systems must operate, and breezily ignores second order impacts which are easily anticipated as well.

We're learning that AI makes perplexing mistakes in a special class of their own, and being unable to learn from a dataset of one instance are not persuaded easily to adapt future behaviour. The real world runs on trust in a way that AI projectionistas don't seem to understand, and you can't just insert "but AI usually works" into our complex societal interactions, it fractures trust; net-negative long term. (Saying "we'll have higher standards then" is an admission of this point). AI's flaws slow down adoption when the rubber meets the road in ways that just seem so obvious.

Let's compare this properly, for tax. If an AI has an error rate of 1% and human accountants have an error rate of 1%, this doesn't mean the errors are the same. I bet the human 1% is pretty low-consequence minor stuff that non tax experts can easily validate, whilst the AI 1% contains some massive own goals that cost you lots of time and money to sort out and you never had a chance of spotting on your own. You can be in that 1% if you like?

"A strong case that what happened was accidental... at worst you pay some modest penalties". Far too much of your arguments ride on frivolous little throw away assertions like these.

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