Original question by @BalakeKarbon@lemmy.ml

It seems like a lot of professionals are thinking we will reach AGI within my lifetime. Some credible sources say within 5 years but who knows.

Either way I suspect it is inevitable. Who knows what may follow. Infinite wealth gap growth, mass job loss, post-work reforms, I’m not sure.

A bunch of questions bounce around in my head, examples may be:

  • Will private property rights be honored in said future?
  • Could Amish communities still exist?
  • Is it something we can prepare for as individuals?

I figured it is important to talk about seeing as it will likely occur in my lifetime and many of yours.

  • Tar_Alcaran@sh.itjust.works
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    1 day ago

    It won’t happen while I’m alive. Current LLMs are basically parrots with a lot of experience, and will never get close to AGI. We’re no closer today than when a computer first passed the Turing test in the 60s.

  • Arkouda@lemmy.ca
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    1 day ago

    I don’t think we will be able to achieve AGI with anything other than an absolute accident. We don’t understand our own brains enough to create one from scratch.

    • amelia@feddit.org
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      11 hours ago

      What makes you think a human brain has anything to do with general intelligence? Have you ever talked to people with a human brain?

      • Arkouda@lemmy.ca
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        5 hours ago

        I have talked to many people. All have demonstrated having a human brain with varying degrees of intelligence.

  • nickwitha_k (he/him)@lemmy.sdf.org
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    16 hours ago

    It may or may not happen. What I do know is that it will never spontaneously arrise from an LLM, no matter how much data they dump into it or how many tons of potable water they carelessly waste.

  • rickdg@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    I’m more worried about jobs getting nuked no matter whatever AGI turns out to be. It can be vapourware and still the capitalist cult will sacrifice labour on that altar.

  • Dadifer@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    I think it is inevitable. The main flaw I see from a lay perspective in current methodology is trying to make one neural network that does everything. Our own brains are composed of multiple neural networks with different jobs interacting with each other, so I assume that AGI will require this approach.

    For example: we are currently struggling with LLM hallucinations. What could reduce this? A separate fact-checking neural network.

    Please keep in mind that my opinion is almost worthless, but you asked.

  • Feyd@programming.dev
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    1 day ago

    I don’t see any reason to believe anything currently being done is a direct path to AGI. Sam Altman and Dario Amodei are straight up liars and the fact so many people lap up their shameless hype marketing is just sad.

  • Lovable Sidekick@lemmy.world
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    19 hours ago

    I have no doubt software will achieve general intelligence, but I think the point where it does will be hard to define. Software can already outdo humans at lots of specific reasoning tasks where the problems are well defined. But how do you measure the generality of problems, so you can say last week our AI wasn’t general enough to call it AGI, but now it is?

  • throwawayacc0430@sh.itjust.works
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    1 day ago

    Is a lab grown genetically modified human-brain hooked to a computer technically considered “Artificial Intelligence”?

  • Gerudo@lemm.ee
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    23 hours ago

    In a single person’s lifetime, we went from not flying to landing on the moon. We absolutely can produce AGI in most of our lifetimes. I predict within 15-20 years, we will have a functioning AGI. It may also need to coincide with actually figuring out quantum computing just for sheer computational needs.

    This all hinges on if investments in AI continue at its current pace, which we already see cracks in though.

  • YappyMonotheist@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    The computer doesn’t even understand things nor asks questions unprompted. I don’t think people understand that it doesn’t understand, lol. Intelligence seems to be non-computational!

  • qantravon@startrek.website
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    24 hours ago

    I agree with most of the other comments here. Is actual AGI something to be worried about? I’m not sure. I don’t know if it’s even possible on our current technology path.

    Based on what I know, it’s almost certainly not going to come from the current crop of LLMs and related research. Despite many claims, they don’t actually think or reason. They’re just really complicated statistical models. And while they can do some interesting and impressive things, I don’t think there is any path of progression that will make them jump beyond what they currently are to actual intelligence.

    Could we develop something in my lifetime (the next 50-ish years or so for me)? Maybe. I think slim chances without a major shift, and I think it would take a public effort akin to the Manhattan Project and the Internet to achieve, but it’s possible. In the next 5 years? Definitely not, some random, massive, lucky break notwithstanding.

    As others have said here, even without AGI, current capitalist practices are already using the limited capabilities of LLMs to upend the labor market and put lots of people out of a job. Even when the LLMs can’t really replace the people effectively. But that’s not a problem with AI, it’s a problem with capitalism that happens with any kind of advancement. They’ll take literally any excuse to extract extra value.

    In summary, I wouldn’t worry about AGI. There’s so many other things that are problems now, and are already existential threats, that worrying about this big old “maybe in 50 years” isn’t really worth your time and energy.