> As of right now, we have no way of knowing in advance what the capabilities of current AI systems will be if we are able to scale them by 10x, 100x, 1000x, and more.
Uhh, yes we do.
I mean sure, we don't know everything, but we know one thing which is very important and which isn't under debate by anyone who knows how current AI works: current AI response quality cannot surpass the quality of its inputs (which include both training data and code assumptions).
> The number of neuron-neuron connections in current AI systems is still tiny compared to the human brain.
And it's become abundantly clear that this isn't the important difference between current AI and the human brain for two reasons: 1) there are large scale structural differences which contain implicit, inherited input data which goes beyond neuron quantity, and 2) as I said before, we cannot surpass the quality of input data, and current training data sets clearly do not contain all the input data one would need to train a human brain anyway.
It's true we don't know exactly what would happen if we scaled up a current-model AI to human brain size, but we do know that it would not produce a human brain level of intelligence. The input datasets we have simply do not contain a human level of intelligence.
Uhh, yes we do.
I mean sure, we don't know everything, but we know one thing which is very important and which isn't under debate by anyone who knows how current AI works: current AI response quality cannot surpass the quality of its inputs (which include both training data and code assumptions).
> The number of neuron-neuron connections in current AI systems is still tiny compared to the human brain.
And it's become abundantly clear that this isn't the important difference between current AI and the human brain for two reasons: 1) there are large scale structural differences which contain implicit, inherited input data which goes beyond neuron quantity, and 2) as I said before, we cannot surpass the quality of input data, and current training data sets clearly do not contain all the input data one would need to train a human brain anyway.
It's true we don't know exactly what would happen if we scaled up a current-model AI to human brain size, but we do know that it would not produce a human brain level of intelligence. The input datasets we have simply do not contain a human level of intelligence.