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> I'm also not worried about AI making humanoid bodies. I'd be worried about a future where mines, factories, and logistics are fully automated: an AI for whom we've constructed a body which is effectively the entire planet.

I know scifi is not authoritative, and no more than human fears made into fiction, but have you read Philip K. Dick's short story "Autofac"?

It's exactly what you describe. The AI he describes isn't evil, nor does it seek our extinction. It actually wants our well-being! It's just that it's taken over all of the planet's resources and insists in producing and making everything for us, so that humans have nothing left to do. And they cannot break the cycle, because the AI is programmed to only transition power back to humans "when they can replicate Autofac output", which of course they cannot, because all the raw resources are hoarded by the AI, which is vastly more efficient!



I think that science fiction plays an important role in discourse. Science fiction authors dedicate years deeply contemplating potential future consequences of technology, and packaging such into compelling stories. This gives us a shorthand for talking about positive outcomes we want to see, and negative outcomes that we want to avoid. People who argue against scifi with a dismissal that "it's just fiction" aren't participating in good faith.

On the other hand, it's important not to pay too close attention to the details of scifi. I find myself writing a novel, and I'm definitely making decisions in support of a narrative arc. Having written the comment above... that planetary factory may very well become the third faction I need for a proper space opera. I'll have to avoid that PKD story for the moment, I don't want the influence.

Though to be clear, in this case, that potentiality arose from an examination of technological progress already underway. For example, I'd be very surprised if people aren't already training LLMs on troves of viruses, metasploit, etc. today.




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