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Dan Emery's avatar

The comparison to issues on the regulation of encryption is interesting, but I think it's imperfect. Encryption is a technology that makes it more difficult to centralize power and support an autocratic regime by giving individual users and groups the opportunity to circumvent malevolent forces. Many AI technologies allow a small number of very large companies to do the opposite, giving autocratic regimes incredible power to collect data and manufacture incriminating material to quash dissent. You need look no further than the cozy relationships between ethno-nationalist Elon Musk and Hindu-nationalist Narendra Modi, or between Trump, Goldman Sachs, and MBS in Saudi Arabia to see the potential risks. Let's not forget that Meta inadvertently (at least at first) allowed for and accelerated the commission of crimes of atrocity in Myanmar. The technology is only as moral as its owners, and most of the owners of these technologies already collaborate with war criminals and dictators without batting an eye.

Mac Black's avatar

I appreciate the focus on cyber and bio weaponization, but like Dan Emery’s comment above, my biggest practical concern is the more commercially viable use of AI for autocracy and the infinite extraction of our attention, consumer desire, and ideological allegiances, like social media with geometric growth curves. AI works both as a service and as a cause of economic disruption. In this domain, resilience involves building friction around the release of private data, and the micro aggregation of cohorts which can share data internally for mutual benefit projects and internal governance experiments without ceding this informational resource to the central authority structure (corporate or federal). Without such friction, our choice of resilience is Luddite isolation (Ted Kazinsky) or merging with the machinery of production.

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