Mfw my doomsday ai cult attracts ai cultists of a flavor I don’t like
Not a fan of yud but getting daily emails from delulus would drive me to wish for the basilisk
He’s set up a community primed to think the scientific establishment’s focus on falsifiablility and peer review is fundamentally worse than “Bayesian” methods, and that you don’t need credentials or even conventional education or experience to have revolutionary good ideas, and strengthened the already existing myth of lone genii pushing science forward (as opposed to systematic progress). Attracting cranks was an inevitable outcome. In fact, Eliezer occasionally praises cranks when he isn’t able to grasp their sheer crankiness (for instance, GeneSmith’s ideas are total nonsense for anyone with more familiarity with genetics than skimming relevant-sounding scientific publications and garbage pop-sci journalism, but Eliezer commented favorably). The only thing that has changed is ChatGPT and it’s clones glazing cranks first making them even more deluded. And of course, someone (cough Eliezer) was hyping up ChatGPT as far back as GPT-2, so it’s only to be expected that cranks would think LLMs were capable of providing legitimate useful feedback.
Not a fan of yud but getting daily emails from delulus would drive me to wish for the basilisk
He’s deliberately cultivated an audience willing to hear cranks out, so this is exactly what he deserves.
LessWrong has swallowed the “Cognitive-Theoretic Model of the Universe” hook, line and sinker, so yeah, zero crank filter.
I fucking hate Elizer so much I want him to explode
I wonder what’s gonna happen first, the bubble popping or Yudkowsky getting so fed up with gen AI he starts sneering.
Is the whole x risk thing as common outside of North America? Realizing I’ve never seen anyone from outside the anglosphere or even just America/Canada be as God killingly Rational as the usual suspects
First reported suicide caused/encouraged/suggested by AI was a Belgian man as far as I can find. Stupidity and susception to gullibility is not an isolated American trait