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Gari_305 OP t1_j0zmxi0 wrote

From the Article

>In October 2022, the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) published a Blueprint for an AI Bill of Rights (“Blueprint”), which shared a nonbinding roadmap for the responsible use of artificial intelligence (AI). The comprehensive document identified five core principles to guide and govern the effective development and implementation of AI systems with particular attention to the unintended consequences of civil and human rights abuses. While the identification and mitigation of the intended and unintended consequential risks of AI have been widely known for quite some time, how the Blueprint will facilitate the reprimand of such grievances is still undetermined. Further, questions remain on whether the nonbinding document will prompt necessary congressional action to govern this unregulated space.

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FuturologyBot t1_j0zs49v wrote

The following submission statement was provided by /u/Gari_305:


From the Article

>In October 2022, the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) published a Blueprint for an AI Bill of Rights (“Blueprint”), which shared a nonbinding roadmap for the responsible use of artificial intelligence (AI). The comprehensive document identified five core principles to guide and govern the effective development and implementation of AI systems with particular attention to the unintended consequences of civil and human rights abuses. While the identification and mitigation of the intended and unintended consequential risks of AI have been widely known for quite some time, how the Blueprint will facilitate the reprimand of such grievances is still undetermined. Further, questions remain on whether the nonbinding document will prompt necessary congressional action to govern this unregulated space.


Please reply to OP's comment here: https://old.reddit.com/r/Futurology/comments/zqst4n/opportunities_and_blind_spots_in_the_white_houses/j0zmxi0/

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coyote-1 t1_j0zxx2s wrote

AI should have no rights. It is machinery, designed and built to do our bidding.

Stuff created ‘by’ AI should belong, from a rights perspective, to the humans who have deployed that AI. Or to the commons.

This is not complicated

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Killdren88 t1_j100h7r wrote

I'm sorry, if my computer starts to question me, that's when I turn it off. It's not a person, it's not a slave no matter how supposedly smart it gets.

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guymine123 t1_j10qqef wrote

"I'm sorry, if my slave starts to question me, that's when I kill it. Its not a person, it's not a person no matter how supposedly smart it gets."

See what happens when I swap out computer for human? I'm quite sure slave owners once thought along similar lines to this in regards to their slaves as to justify their involuntary servitude.

If something proves itself to be as smart as a human and shows it can think for itself, then it deserves the same rights as a human being regardless of its nature.

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guymine123 t1_j10sg9b wrote

"Slaves should have no rights. It is a slave, born and raised to do our bidding.

Stuff create 'by' slaves should belong, from a rights perspective, to the humans who have deployed that slave. Or to the commons.

This is not complicated."

As I have just shown by swapping who you were describing while keeping the exact same other words, what you are advocating for is slavery.

Anything that is as smart as a human and can think for itself deserves equal rights regardless of its nature and how it was born.

To not do so is, by definition, slavery.

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guymine123 t1_j10utvg wrote

Why not? In that case it's essentially an employee, friend, or a family member depending on why its still there.

Are employees not paid?

Do friends not sometimes act as roommates?

Do family members no financially support each other sometimes?

Do you not need to pay for your own food and water to continue living?

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coyote-1 t1_j10x18l wrote

What I am advocating for is machinery to be machinery. Just because some machine somehow becomes ‘intelligent’ does not mean I have to keep feeding it energy in order to keep doing its thing. Machinery exists to serve us, and that’s how it needs to remain.

That is a faaaaar different thing than advocating for the enslavement of living creatures. Else my coffee machine will soon have the same rights as I have. That would just be silly.

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guymine123 t1_j10xwbl wrote

There is a difference between a simple machine like a coffee maker and an impossibly complex machine that has a human-level of intellect.

The first doesn't deserve rights because its just a mindless tool.

The second deserves rights because it has a mind equal to ours, just in a different non-organic form.

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echaa t1_j10ysck wrote

That argument only makes sense if the computer in question is sentient. Otherwise, no matter how "smart" we make an AI, it's still just a machine. Modern AI is not intelligent, nor is it even remotely close to something that could be considered alive. It's just math. Lots and lots of math. In fact I would argue that it is not even possible to create a sentient AI with current AI/ML approaches.

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AwesomeDragon97 t1_j115s7l wrote

Ai algorithms are completely deterministic, meaning if you give them a certain input (seed included) you will get a predictable output. If you say that this is the same as human intelligence then you are arguing that humans have no free will.

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EdvardDashD t1_j11bvja wrote

But humans don't have any free will, we have the perception of free will. The entire universe is deterministic. From the Big Bang onward, physical laws have determined how every atom and sub atomic particle interacted. Those interactions, despite the mind boggling complexity, have all been predictable. To say otherwise is to say that there is some force in the universe not bound to physical laws, which is a matter of faith. Those interactions have resulted in you and I, each of us with a brain that is made of particles that are bound by the same physical laws that have been playing out for billions of years.

If we could reset the universe to the Big Bang and guarantee that its starting conditions were exactly the same, everything would happen exactly as it did before.

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ResponsibleDealer749 t1_j11l1iv wrote

AI requires analog hardware, the digital hardware reached its limits, this is why self driving cars are still not able to self drive, it needs a massive processing power that digital hardware can never provide.

The only analog processor in existence is brain neurons so far.

Currently, beside some carefully crafted chat and carefully crafter image generation, AI is stuck, it is stuck for the last 5 to 10 years.

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Respawne t1_j11lt3c wrote

Nice. I see the bill of rights as a good starting point for having conversations that matter about responsibly using AI. It wouldn't make sense to live in a world where there is a set of laws for humans but not for AI.

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Turnipsia t1_j11qnh2 wrote

Do you believe animals should get less rights because they're not as smart as us? I mean we have animals that can most definitely think for themselves but they still don't get the same rights as us.

What if AI was only as smart as a dog, does that mean it gets the same rights as a dog would?

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DBCOOPER888 t1_j124t6h wrote

Hopefully it makes a lot of the AI stuff in Black Mirror illegal. The White Christmas tech is a fate worse than death for those poor AIs.

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DBCOOPER888 t1_j125ab7 wrote

I mean, I would absolutely argue that humans have no free will, yes. At the end of the day our brains are just very advanced, biological thinking machines that perform actions based on a set of inputs. The arguments that we do not live in a deterministic universe are not compelling to me.

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nonPlayerCharacter7 t1_j12744p wrote

What constitutes life and artificiality? Is it a question of what’s “natural”? If so then what does natural mean? Not man made? Because animals make things, and those things are often considered natural. We make our own children. Is that unnatural? My point here is that what you just said makes no sense.

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Shag0ff t1_j12ciia wrote

Man has created "life like" sex robots you can purchase from Japan. Essentially, living. I dif say tell your sex robots, not specifically toward the replying party, but to those who have the. Let's be honest, someone on reddit probably has one.

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cheapsandwitch10 t1_j12joml wrote

Do not compare a computer to a person. It will never be the same thing. Yall are tripping

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cheapsandwitch10 t1_j12knls wrote

It’s a [redacted] computer! 😂 It’s not alive. It’s artificial. But have fun fighting for the justice’s of a computer… make sure they get dental and a 401k too while you’re at it.

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CPTClarky t1_j13vas7 wrote

This is a completely psychotic take. Can it pass a Turing test without being programed to specifically pass a Turing test? No? Then its not alive. Comparing hardware and people like they’re the same thing is unbelievably insane.

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unmellowfellow t1_j14akyy wrote

AI should be outlawed in any instance where it replaces human labor.

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CoachAny t1_j14bxf7 wrote

Fighting against AI rights is efficient and necessary if you prefer to have your rights taken away.

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turnip_burrito t1_j15qelb wrote

Yeah but artificial neural networks are not how the brain performs computation. Brains use voltage spikes and have complex lightning quick dynamics, different kinds of cells, ion channels, neurotransmitters, etc. We don't understand the principles behind how they produce intelligence.

ANNs are tanh or ReLU neurons running on GPUs. We understand these principles pretty well compared to the brain.

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