It's pretty much generally agreed upon in the EA community that the development of unaligned AGI is the most pressing problem, with some saying that we could have AGI within the next 30 years or so. In The Precipice, Toby Ord estimates the existential risk from unaligned AGI is 1 in 10 over the next century. On 80,000 Hours, 'positively shaping the development of artificial intelligence' is at the top of the list of its highest priority areas.
Yet, outside of EA basically no one is worried about AI. If you talk to strangers about other potential existential risks like pandemics, nuclear war, or climate change, it makes sense to them. If you speak to a stranger about your worries of unaligned AI, they'll think you're insane (and watch too many sci-fi films).
On a quick scan of some mainstream news sites, it's hard to find much about existential risk and AI. There are bits here and there about how AI could be discriminatory, but mostly the focus is on useful things AI can do e.g. 'How rangers are using AI to help protect India's tigers'. In fact (and this is after about 5 mins of searching so not a full blown analysis) it seems that overall the sentiment is generally positive. Which is totally at odds to what you see in the EA community (I know there is acknowledgement of how AI could be really positive, but mainly the discourse is about how bad it could be). Alternatively, if you search nuclear war, pretty much every mainstream news site is talking about it. It's true we're at a slightly more risky time at the moment, but I reckon most EA's would still say the risk of unaligned AGI is higher than the risk of nuclear war, even given the current tensions.
So if it's such a big risk, why is no one talking about it?
Why is it not on the agenda of governments?
Learning about AI, I feel like I should be terrified, but when I speak to people who aren't in EA, I feel like my fears are overblown.
I genuinely want to hear people's perspectives on why it's not talked about, because without mainstream support of the idea that AI is a risk, I feel like it's going to be a lot harder to get to where we want to be.
You're misunderstanding something about why many people are not concerned with AGI risks despite being sympathetic to various aspects of AI ethics. No one concerned with AGI x-risk is arguing it will disproportionately harm the underprivileged. But current AI harms are from things like discriminatory criminal sentencing algorithms, so a lot of the AI ethics discourse involves fairness and privilege, and people concerned with those issues don't fully appreciate that misaligned AGI 1) hurts everyone, and 2) is a real thing that very well might happen within 20 years, not just some imaginary sci-fi story made up by overprivileged white nerds.
There is some discourse around technological unemployment putting low-skilled employees out of work, but this is a niche political argument that I've mostly heard of proponents of UBI. I think it's less critical than x-risk, and if artificial intelligence gains the ability to do diverse tasks as well as humans can, I'll be just as unemployed a computer programmer as anyone else is as a coal miner.