This is the text for a talk exploring why experts disagree so strongly about whether artificial superintelligence (ASI) poses an existential risk to humanity. I review some key arguments on both sides, emphasizing that the fundamental danger isn't about whether "rogue ASI" gets out of control: it's the raw power ASI will confer, and the lower barriers to creating dangerous technologies. This point is not new, but has two underappreciated consequences. First, many people find rogue ASI implausible, and this has led them to mistakenly dismiss existential risk. Second: much work on AI alignment, while well-intentioned, speeds progress toward catastrophic capabilities, without addressing our world's potential vulnerability to dangerous technologies.
This article is extremely well written and I really appreciated how well he supported his positions with facts.
However, this article seems to suggest that he doesn't quite understand the argument for making alignment the priority. This is understandable as it's rarely articulated clearly. The core limitation of differential tech development/d/acc/coceleration is that these kinds of imperfect defenses only buy time (this judgment can be justified with the articles he provides in his article). An aligned ASI, if it were possible, would be capable of a degree of perfection beyond that of human institutions. This would give us a stable long-term solution. Plans that involve less powerful AIs or a more limited degree of alignment mostly do not
Answering on the LW thread