Animal welfare guy tuning in. My own take is that the majority of the world actually is almost entirely indifferent about animal suffering, so if AI tries to reflect global values (not just the values of the progressive, elite silicon valley bubble) there is a real risk that it will be indifferent to animal suffering. Consider how Foie Gras is still legal in most countries, or bullfighting, both of which are totally unnecessary. And those are just examples from western countries.
I think it’s very likely that TAI will lock in only a very mild concern for animal welfare. Or perhaps, concern for animal welfare in certain contexts (e.g. pets), and none in others (e.g. chicken). Maybe that will lead to a future without factory farming, but it will lead to a future with unnecessary animal suffering nonetheless.
What I’m not sure about is: how do we ensure that TAI locks in a strong valuation of animal welfare? One route is to try to change how much society cares about animal welfare, and hope that TAI then reflects that. I guess this is the hope of many animal advocates. But I admit that seems too slow to work at this stage, so I agree that animal advocates should probably prioritize trying to influence those developing AI right now.
Animal welfare guy tuning in. My own take is that the majority of the world actually is almost entirely indifferent about animal suffering, so if AI tries to reflect global values (not just the values of the progressive, elite silicon valley bubble) there is a real risk that it will be indifferent to animal suffering. Consider how Foie Gras is still legal in most countries, or bullfighting, both of which are totally unnecessary. And those are just examples from western countries.
I think it’s very likely that TAI will lock in only a very mild concern for animal welfare. Or perhaps, concern for animal welfare in certain contexts (e.g. pets), and none in others (e.g. chicken). Maybe that will lead to a future without factory farming, but it will lead to a future with unnecessary animal suffering nonetheless.
What I’m not sure about is: how do we ensure that TAI locks in a strong valuation of animal welfare? One route is to try to change how much society cares about animal welfare, and hope that TAI then reflects that. I guess this is the hope of many animal advocates. But I admit that seems too slow to work at this stage, so I agree that animal advocates should probably prioritize trying to influence those developing AI right now.