What happens when our computers get smarter than we are?

Nick Bostrom

I work with a bunch of mathematicians, philosophers and computer scientists, and we sit around and think about the future of machine intelligence, among other things. Some people think that some of these things are sort of science fiction-y, far out there, crazy. But I like to say, okay, let's look at the modern human condition. (Laughter) This is the normal way for things to be.

But if we think about it, we are actually recently arrived guests on this planet, the human species. Think about if Earth was created one year ago, the human species, then, would be 10 minutes old. The industrial era started two seconds ago. Another way to look at this is to think of world GDP over the last 10,000 years, I've actually taken the trouble to plot this for you in a graph. It looks like this. (Laughter) It's a curious shape for a normal condition. I sure wouldn't want to sit on it. (Laughter)

Let's ask ourselves, what is the cause of this current anomaly? Some people would say it's technology. Now it's true, technology has accumulated through human history, and right now, technology advances extremely rapidly -- that is the proximate cause, that's why we are currently so very productive. But I like to think back further to the ultimate cause.

Look at these two highly distinguished gentlemen: We have Kanzi -- he's mastered 200 lexical tokens, an incredible feat. And Ed Witten unleashed the second superstring revolution. If we look under the hood, this is what we find: basically the same thing. One is a little larger, it maybe also has a few tricks in the exact way it's wired. These invisible differences cannot be too complicated, however, because there have only been 250,000 generations since our last common ancestor. We know that complicated mechanisms take a long time to evolve. So a bunch of relatively minor changes take us from Kanzi to Witten, from broken-off tree branches to intercontinental ballistic missiles.

So this then seems pretty obvious that everything we've achieved, and everything we care about, depends crucially on some relatively minor changes that made the human mind. And the corollary, of course, is that any further changes that could significantly change the substrate of thinking could have potentially enormous consequences.

Some of my colleagues think we're on the verge of something that could cause a profound change in that substrate, and that is machine superintelligence. Artificial intelligence used to be about putting commands in a box. You would have human programmers that would painstakingly handcraft knowledge items. You build up these expert systems, and they were kind of useful for some purposes, but they were very brittle, you couldn't scale them. Basically, you got out only what you put in. But since then, a paradigm shift has taken place in the field of artificial intelligence.

Today, the action is really around machine learning. So rather than handcrafting knowledge representations and features, we create algorithms that learn, often from raw perceptual data. Basically the same thing that the human infant does. The result is A.I. that is not limited to one domain -- the same system can learn to translate between any pairs of languages, or learn to play any computer game on the Atari console. Now of course, A.I. is still nowhere near having the same powerful, cross-domain ability to learn and plan as a human being has. The cortex still has some algorithmic tricks that we don't yet know how to match in machines.

So the question is, how far are we from being able to match those tricks? A couple of years ago, we did a survey of some of the world's leading A.I. experts, to see what they think, and one of the questions we asked was, "By which year do you think there is a 50 percent probability that we will have achieved human-level machine intelligence?" We defined human-level here as the ability to perform almost any job at least as well as an adult human, so real human-level, not just within some limited domain. And the median answer was 2040 or 2050, depending on precisely which group of experts we asked. Now, it could happen much, much later, or sooner, the truth is nobody really knows.

What we do know is that the ultimate limit to information processing in a machine substrate lies far outside the limits in biological tissue. This comes down to physics. A biological neuron fires, maybe, at 200 hertz, 200 times a second. But even a present-day transistor operates at the Gigahertz. Neurons propagate slowly in axons, 100 meters per second, tops. But in computers, signals can travel at the speed of light. There are also size limitations, like a human brain has to fit inside a cranium, but a computer can be the size of a warehouse or larger. So the potential for superintelligence lies dormant in matter, much like the power of the atom lay dormant throughout human history, patiently waiting there until 1945. In this century, scientists may learn to awaken the power of artificial intelligence. And I think we might then see an intelligence explosion.

Now most people, when they think about what is smart and what is dumb, I think have in mind a picture roughly like this. So at one end we have the village idiot, and then far over at the other side we have Ed Witten, or Albert Einstein, or whoever your favorite guru is. But I think that from the point of view of artificial intelligence, the true picture is actually probably more like this: AI starts out at this point here, at zero intelligence, and then, after many, many years of really hard work, maybe eventually we get to mouse-level artificial intelligence, something that can navigate cluttered environments as well as a mouse can. And then, after many, many more years of really hard work, lots of investment, maybe eventually we get to chimpanzee-level artificial intelligence. And then, after even more years of really, really hard work, we get to village idiot artificial intelligence. And a few moments later, we are beyond Ed Witten. The train doesn't stop at Humanville Station. It's likely, rather, to swoosh right by.

Now this has profound implications, particularly when it comes to questions of power. For example, chimpanzees are strong -- pound for pound, a chimpanzee is about twice as strong as a fit human male. And yet, the fate of Kanzi and his pals depends a lot more on what we humans do than on what the chimpanzees do themselves. Once there is superintelligence, the fate of humanity may depend on what the superintelligence does. Think about it: Machine intelligence is the last invention that humanity will ever need to make. Machines will then be better at inventing than we are, and they'll be doing so on digital timescales. What this means is basically a telescoping of the future. Think of all the crazy technologies that you could have imagined maybe humans could have developed in the fullness of time: cures for aging, space colonization, self-replicating nanobots or uploading of minds into computers, all kinds of science fiction-y stuff that's nevertheless consistent with the laws of physics. All of this superintelligence could develop, and possibly quite rapidly.

Now, a superintelligence with such technological maturity would be extremely powerful, and at least in some scenarios, it would be able to get what it wants. We would then have a future that would be shaped by the preferences of this A.I. Now a good question is, what are those preferences? Here it gets trickier. To make any headway with this, we must first of all avoid anthropomorphizing. And this is ironic because every newspaper article about the future of A.I. has a picture of this: So I think what we need to do is to conceive of the issue more abstractly, not in terms of vivid Hollywood scenarios.

We need to think of intelligence as an optimization process, a process that steers the future into a particular set of configurations. A superintelligence is a really strong optimization process. It's extremely good at using available means to achieve a state in which its goal is realized. This means that there is no necessary conenction between being highly intelligent in this sense, and having an objective that we humans would find worthwhile or meaningful.

Suppose we give an A.I. the goal to make humans smile. When the A.I. is weak, it performs useful or amusing actions that cause its user to smile. When the A.I. becomes superintelligent, it realizes that there is a more effective way to achieve this goal: take control of the world and stick electrodes into the facial muscles of humans to cause constant, beaming grins. Another example, suppose we give A.I. the goal to solve a difficult mathematical problem. When the A.I. becomes superintelligent, it realizes that the most effective way to get the solution to this problem is by transforming the planet into a giant computer, so as to increase its thinking capacity. And notice that this gives the A.I.s an instrumental reason to do things to us that we might not approve of. Human beings in this model are threats, we could prevent the mathematical problem from being solved.

Of course, perceivably things won't go wrong in these particular ways; these are cartoon examples. But the general point here is important: if you create a really powerful optimization process to maximize for objective x, you better make sure that your definition of x incorporates everything you care about. This is a lesson that's also taught in many a myth. King Midas wishes that everything he touches be turned into gold. He touches his daughter, she turns into gold. He touches his food, it turns into gold. This could become practically relevant, not just as a metaphor for greed, but as an illustration of what happens if you create a powerful optimization process and give it misconceived or poorly specified goals.

Now you might say, if a computer starts sticking electrodes into people's faces, we'd just shut it off. A, this is not necessarily so easy to do if we've grown dependent on the system -- like, where is the off switch to the Internet? B, why haven't the chimpanzees flicked the off switch to humanity, or the Neanderthals? They certainly had reasons. We have an off switch, for example, right here. (Choking) The reason is that we are an intelligent adversary; we can anticipate threats and plan around them. But so could a superintelligent agent, and it would be much better at that than we are. The point is, we should not be confident that we have this under control here.

And we could try to make our job a little bit easier by, say, putting the A.I. in a box, like a secure software environment, a virtual reality simulation from which it cannot escape. But how confident can we be that the A.I. couldn't find a bug. Given that merely human hackers find bugs all the time, I'd say, probably not very confident. So we disconnect the ethernet cable to create an air gap, but again, like merely human hackers routinely transgress air gaps using social engineering. Right now, as I speak, I'm sure there is some employee out there somewhere who has been talked into handing out her account details by somebody claiming to be from the I.T. department.

More creative scenarios are also possible, like if you're the A.I., you can imagine wiggling electrodes around in your internal circuitry to create radio waves that you can use to communicate. Or maybe you could pretend to malfunction, and then when the programmers open you up to see what went wrong with you, they look at the source code -- Bam! -- the manipulation can take place. Or it could output the blueprint to a really nifty technology, and when we implement it, it has some surreptitious side effect that the A.I. had planned. The point here is that we should not be confident in our ability to keep a superintelligent genie locked up in its bottle forever. Sooner or later, it will out.

I believe that the answer here is to figure out how to create superintelligent A.I. such that even if -- when -- it escapes, it is still safe because it is fundamentally on our side because it shares our values. I see no way around this difficult problem.

Now, I'm actually fairly optimistic that this problem can be solved. We wouldn't have to write down a long list of everything we care about, or worse yet, spell it out in some computer language like C++ or Python, that would be a task beyond hopeless. Instead, we would create an A.I. that uses its intelligence to learn what we value, and its motivation system is constructed in such a way that it is motivated to pursue our values or to perform actions that it predicts we would approve of. We would thus leverage its intelligence as much as possible to solve the problem of value-loading.

This can happen, and the outcome could be very good for humanity. But it doesn't happen automatically. The initial conditions for the intelligence explosion might need to be set up in just the right way if we are to have a controlled detonation. The values that the A.I. has need to match ours, not just in the familiar context, like where we can easily check how the A.I. behaves, but also in all novel contexts that the A.I. might encounter in the indefinite future.

And there are also some esoteric issues that would need to be solved, sorted out: the exact details of its decision theory, how to deal with logical uncertainty and so forth. So the technical problems that need to be solved to make this work look quite difficult -- not as difficult as making a superintelligent A.I., but fairly difficult. Here is the worry: Making superintelligent A.I. is a really hard challenge. Making superintelligent A.I. that is safe involves some additional challenge on top of that. The risk is that if somebody figures out how to crack the first challenge without also having cracked the additional challenge of ensuring perfect safety.

So I think that we should work out a solution to the control problem in advance, so that we have it available by the time it is needed. Now it might be that we cannot solve the entire control problem in advance because maybe some elements can only be put in place once you know the details of the architecture where it will be implemented. But the more of the control problem that we solve in advance, the better the odds that the transition to the machine intelligence era will go well.

This to me looks like a thing that is well worth doing and I can imagine that if things turn out okay, that people a million years from now look back at this century and it might well be that they say that the one thing we did that really mattered was to get this thing right.

Thank you.

最后編輯于
?著作權歸作者所有,轉載或內容合作請聯(lián)系作者
  • 序言:七十年代末,一起剝皮案震驚了整個濱河市,隨后出現(xiàn)的幾起案子悼粮,更是在濱河造成了極大的恐慌竖席,老刑警劉巖,帶你破解...
    沈念sama閱讀 207,248評論 6 481
  • 序言:濱河連續(xù)發(fā)生了三起死亡事件油昂,死亡現(xiàn)場離奇詭異革娄,居然都是意外死亡,警方通過查閱死者的電腦和手機冕碟,發(fā)現(xiàn)死者居然都...
    沈念sama閱讀 88,681評論 2 381
  • 文/潘曉璐 我一進店門拦惋,熙熙樓的掌柜王于貴愁眉苦臉地迎上來,“玉大人安寺,你說我怎么就攤上這事厕妖。” “怎么了挑庶?”我有些...
    開封第一講書人閱讀 153,443評論 0 344
  • 文/不壞的土叔 我叫張陵言秸,是天一觀的道長。 經(jīng)常有香客問我挠羔,道長井仰,這世上最難降的妖魔是什么? 我笑而不...
    開封第一講書人閱讀 55,475評論 1 279
  • 正文 為了忘掉前任破加,我火速辦了婚禮俱恶,結果婚禮上,老公的妹妹穿的比我還像新娘范舀。我一直安慰自己合是,他們只是感情好,可當我...
    茶點故事閱讀 64,458評論 5 374
  • 文/花漫 我一把揭開白布锭环。 她就那樣靜靜地躺著聪全,像睡著了一般。 火紅的嫁衣襯著肌膚如雪辅辩。 梳的紋絲不亂的頭發(fā)上难礼,一...
    開封第一講書人閱讀 49,185評論 1 284
  • 那天,我揣著相機與錄音玫锋,去河邊找鬼蛾茉。 笑死,一個胖子當著我的面吹牛撩鹿,可吹牛的內容都是我干的谦炬。 我是一名探鬼主播,決...
    沈念sama閱讀 38,451評論 3 401
  • 文/蒼蘭香墨 我猛地睜開眼,長吁一口氣:“原來是場噩夢啊……” “哼键思!你這毒婦竟也來了础爬?” 一聲冷哼從身側響起,我...
    開封第一講書人閱讀 37,112評論 0 261
  • 序言:老撾萬榮一對情侶失蹤吼鳞,失蹤者是張志新(化名)和其女友劉穎看蚜,沒想到半個月后,有當?shù)厝嗽跇淞掷锇l(fā)現(xiàn)了一具尸體赖条,經(jīng)...
    沈念sama閱讀 43,609評論 1 300
  • 正文 獨居荒郊野嶺守林人離奇死亡失乾,尸身上長有42處帶血的膿包…… 初始之章·張勛 以下內容為張勛視角 年9月15日...
    茶點故事閱讀 36,083評論 2 325
  • 正文 我和宋清朗相戀三年,在試婚紗的時候發(fā)現(xiàn)自己被綠了纬乍。 大學時的朋友給我發(fā)了我未婚夫和他白月光在一起吃飯的照片碱茁。...
    茶點故事閱讀 38,163評論 1 334
  • 序言:一個原本活蹦亂跳的男人離奇死亡,死狀恐怖仿贬,靈堂內的尸體忽然破棺而出纽竣,到底是詐尸還是另有隱情,我是刑警寧澤茧泪,帶...
    沈念sama閱讀 33,803評論 4 323
  • 正文 年R本政府宣布蜓氨,位于F島的核電站,受9級特大地震影響队伟,放射性物質發(fā)生泄漏穴吹。R本人自食惡果不足惜,卻給世界環(huán)境...
    茶點故事閱讀 39,357評論 3 307
  • 文/蒙蒙 一嗜侮、第九天 我趴在偏房一處隱蔽的房頂上張望港令。 院中可真熱鬧,春花似錦锈颗、人聲如沸顷霹。這莊子的主人今日做“春日...
    開封第一講書人閱讀 30,357評論 0 19
  • 文/蒼蘭香墨 我抬頭看了看天上的太陽淋淀。三九已至,卻和暖如春覆醇,著一層夾襖步出監(jiān)牢的瞬間朵纷,已是汗流浹背。 一陣腳步聲響...
    開封第一講書人閱讀 31,590評論 1 261
  • 我被黑心中介騙來泰國打工永脓, 沒想到剛下飛機就差點兒被人妖公主榨干…… 1. 我叫王不留柴罐,地道東北人。 一個月前我還...
    沈念sama閱讀 45,636評論 2 355
  • 正文 我出身青樓憨奸,卻偏偏與公主長得像,于是被迫代替她去往敵國和親凿试。 傳聞我的和親對象是個殘疾皇子排宰,可洞房花燭夜當晚...
    茶點故事閱讀 42,925評論 2 344

推薦閱讀更多精彩內容

  • **2014真題Directions:Read the following text. Choose the be...
    又是夜半驚坐起閱讀 9,399評論 0 23
  • 真正的開始讀書似芝,并且堅持讀書,才發(fā)現(xiàn)板甘,讀書給自己帶來的改變党瓮,竟然是空前的 當過去的種種想不通,放不下盐类,理不順寞奸,解不...
    炎炎的幸福部落閱讀 929評論 2 10
  • 學習網(wǎng)址:條件判斷 注意: 只要x是非零數(shù)值、非空字符串在跳、非空list等枪萄,就判斷為True,否則為False猫妙。 練...
    王詩翔閱讀 461評論 0 0