the singularity institute vs. weird things

The Singularity Institute has been reading Weird Things and they have some objections...

brain with glasses

You may remember my post on the businesses of evangelizing the concept of the technological Singularity in which humans will become immortal hybrids of man and machine. On its own, it's a very good idea, upheld as a perfectly legitimate goal for medical professionals and tech experts. In the next few hundred years when the technology to radically extend lifespans can be built and reliably tested. Not something that will magically appear in the next few decades and should be preached for a fee or used to sell something verging on quack medicine at exorbitant prices. My stance is that technology isn't a magical panacea, but a means to an end.

Well, one of the post's readers happened to be Michael Vassar, the president of the Singularity Institute which hosts the Singularity Summit mentioned as an example of charging fees for futurology lectures. And he's not exactly thrilled with what he read, though not for the reasons you may expect. In fact, he says that many of my criticisms of what Ray Kurzweil and Pete Diamandis preach are perfectly valid. However, he thinks I missed a few crucial points and he'd be more than happy to send me some detailed replies in the next few weeks.

It's true that both of us are techies and both of us believe that technology can be leveraged to do great things, but we work into two different realms. Vassar's realm is that of high brow theory and brainstorming. My focus tends to be practical implementation driven by a need to solve complex problems. Where he looks for a way to invent something new or push the limits of computers, I look for a way to direct that power into solving clients' needs. So if you've been following my articles on the Technological Singularity and AI, you definitely don't want to miss the upcoming nerd fight… err, I mean a series of debate posts on these concepts…

update: the Singularity debate round one, round two and round three.

  archived from wowt
              
# tech // ray kurzweil / technological singularity / transhumanism


  show comments
latest reads

the xenonite plot armor of project hail mary

Hail Mary was a badly mismanaged, rushed death trap driven by groupthink and politics, and Ryland Grace was right to balk at the idea.
the xenonite plot armor of project hail mary

how ai can love bomb you into being an asshole

In ads, chatbots are omniscient arbiters and truth brokers. In practice, they're sycophantic enablers according to the latest research.
how ai can love bomb you into being an asshole

why we're all getting meaner and meaner online

Yes, being a professional asshole is now a viable career option. Which is awful news for online discourse.
why we're all getting meaner and meaner online

how and why corporate jargon and technobabble lull the mind

Yes, sadly, some of the worst stereotypes about corporate culture really are true.
how and why corporate jargon and technobabble lull the mind

the great theoretical chatbot job apocalypse

According to Anthropic, LLMs can obliterate most white collar jobs. Well, theoretically...
the great theoretical chatbot job apocalypse

i prompt, therefore i am: how tech forgot about human agency

Tone deaf tech bros no longer seem to understand that their pitch for AI is fundamentally dystopian and dismissive.
i prompt, therefore i am: how tech forgot about human agency