SmartLess - "MIT Professor Max Tegmark: LIVE in Boston"
Episode Date: July 13, 2023Find out more about mechanical cats doing Cats on Broadway… with our esteemed surprise guest: physicist, cosmologist, and machine-learning researcher Max Tegmark, LIVE in Boston.(Recorded o...n February 04, 2022)Listen to “SmartLess Live” episodes four weeks early and ad-free on Wondery+See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Hey, listener, and welcome to Smart List.
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All right.
Welcome to SmartLess.
This is officially a cold open, I guess. This is a cold open.
Right?
This is like a...
Like on the podcast, we just kind of talk.
Before we say what the name of the day.
Like an intro, and then we got to be like...
Yeah.
We got to be like...
Professional.
And like, oh, we...
We get to...
We usually...
You're just copying what I'm saying.
You're just copying what I'm saying.
You're just copying what I'm saying.
I don't know how to tap into this.
That's okay.
Just say the only thing that you know what to say.
Welcome to Smartless!
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart. We're so happy to be in Boston. Nice to be here. Oh my God. Tonight.
And you guys, you guys rolled out your nicest weather for us.
Yeah.
Oh, felt like being home in Canada almost.
But thank you, thank you, thank you.
Not only for listening to our garbage,
but coming out and looking out at us.
Yeah.
And you guys, you guys rolled out your nicest weather for us. Yeah. Oh, felt like being home in Canada almost. Uh, but thank you, thank you, thank you,
not only for listening to our garbage,
but coming out and looking at our garbage.
Yeah.
It's a better way to say that.
No, the way, but better way to say that.
Um, so, all right, let's sit down.
Yeah, we're just excited.
Sit down.
Um, so, uh, oh wait, somebody left their phone here.
That's me. I brought it into my pocket.
I don't know why.
If I do get a call though, we're just gonna take a quick break, okay?
From the inspection. It is mine. Sorry.
The camera was on too, Granddad.
Yeah, my flash was on.
Yeah, put it over here.
And I'm showing gum.
So really professional operation here.
All right, so let me ask you something.
Yeah. Do you guys, how is traveling going for you
with all of this?
Great interview question.
What about signs?
I did a little preparation, is that?
No, I wonder what I want to know that because,
as of this morning, Will started calling me Katy Perry
because I bring so many outfits with me.
I don't know.
This is the best you could use.
It was just, I know.
Well, the true story is the sweet girl who picks out my clothes for me
because I don't know how to do that, clearly.
She sent me, she sent over, Godlover,
she's a really close family, but she sent me over two of the exact same outfits today.
So I kind of put this together, Willie Nilly.
It is a new thing for us because we, you know,
we do this thing on our laptops.
And we were.
And we know we're together, we're together, we're together.
We wear pajamas.
Yeah.
So this whole notion of having to dress
and actually have a specific time and all that stuff,
it is odd.
Yeah, I think.
And that there's people here.
Yeah, yeah.
And usually one of us is a few minutes late.
I am commonly late.
Oh, that's you.
I am.
OK.
But here's it.
I don't like to be, if you're early, you've wasted time,
right?
You have an issue.
I know.
I've just got a lot of milling around.
Go out there.
Just wait.
I'm interested.
I go to a doctor's office now late,
so I don't have to wait the 20 minutes they make me wait.
Right.
I just go.
By the way, you still have to wait.
But do they like that?
They love me for that.
This sounds familiar.
I feel like we talked about this, maybe.
I don't think we have a time.
I don't think we've ever.
I don't think we've ever.
You're never early or late, are you?
No, I'm right on time. You're always right on time. What is that? I'll never ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever I'm going, I don't know, ask Kenny Perry over here. Like that, so we'll just bully.
And then we all have, you're gonna make me roar in our head.
And Jason, you've been singing that all day.
I can't, I'm so, I can't, is everybody,
when you get a song you can't get it out,
am I the only one like, but like,
it lasts an abnormal amount of time, like,
a week, I'll get something stuck on my head.
They say, like, to count down backwards from a certain amount of number and that will make you stop thinking of time, like, a week. I'll get something stuck on my head. They say, like, to count down backwards
from a certain amount of number
and that will make you stop thinking of the,
are you doing it right now?
It just worked for songs.
Yeah.
Because there's a lot of shit I'd like to forget.
Like that kind of thing.
Yeah, so if that works, I want to do that.
Well, the other thing that happens to me yesterday
was I found, my back has been itching,
and then we have, we have,
are you gonna get it?
Yeah, so we have this.
He's backing into a plug for hypoconyl.
No, I know, I was other podcast.
Then it is.
And, and, and.
So Sean, wearing conversations in the hotel room,
and Sean does a lot of this, he's like,
uh-huh, what's going on,
and he gets up against the door and he's going,
really?
Yeah.
Like a dog, like a non-stop.
Like a dog, and scratches his, yeah.
So then we, our friend Eli's with us,
and who we love, and it's a very good friend of ours.
And I'm like, what's going on with my back?
He goes, take a short off, let me see.
So I took the thing and I'm back and he goes,
that's shingles.
Truly.
Yeah, he said I have shingles.
Oh, you know there?
No. No, he went.
Oh my God, that shingles.
And I'm like, what?
I just got the vaccine for shingles.
How could I have shingles. And I'm like, what? I just got the vaccine for shingles. How could I have shingles?
Right.
Because if there's a vaccine for it, it's in my body.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Oh.
Yeah.
Right.
Yeah.
Good health isn't political.
No.
Say that again.
Thank you.
No, thank you.
You can get a show.
You just got a pen. No. Say that again. Thank you. No, thank you. You can get a show.
He's got a pen.
Yeah.
I used to pen earlier to write my intro.
And since we're talking about science,
it's a great segue.
Fellas.
I wanted to tap into the brain power of this city.
OK.
We got a big brain coming out.
This fella has a master's and a PhD from Berkeley.
He's a fellow at Princeton.
He has tenure at Penn.
He arrived here at MIT in 2004 where he still works today.
He does it all from physics to cosmology to quantum stuff
and computers.
He's going to explain what it is.
Stephen Hawking.
Will Ferrell.
Stephen Hawking.
Please welcome a guy you can definitely make us all more smart,
not less smart.
Smart less, you get it?
Max Tagmark.
Oh!
What?
Max Tagmark.
Come on, Max.
Oh my gosh.
Get out of here. There he is.
Max.
This is Max, Mark.
Hello, man.
It's so nice to meet you.
Come on, please.
This is so exciting.
Well, see, we have the same stylist.
Oh, wow.
He wears a little better than you do.
He certainly does.
Now, can you do a better job than I just did explaining?
What it is that you do, what it, first of all, how do you introduce yourself, call yourself what you do a better job than I just did explaining what it is that you do?
What it is? First of all, how do you introduce yourself?
I call yourself what you do. By the way, you look like a rock star.
Well, it depends on what I want. Like if I were on a long flight,
and I just want to be left alone, and the person asking you what you do, your pedophile.
Physics. That was my worst subject in my school. Five hours of silence.
Right. Right, right.
But you are a wanna talk, yeah.
I'm the old astronomy.
I'm like, oh, I'm a Virgo.
Oh, right.
Well, maybe I could say cosmology,
they'll be talking about eyeliner, makeup.
Okay, so the class you teach is,
oh, it's whenever they want me to torture the students with
that year.
So it can be either torturing the freshman, it came out of high school with the basic physics
of how stuff moves to doing the torturing, the grad students with some advanced topics
about our universe.
Okay.
Or I taught, most of my time I spend actually torturing my grad students, doing research on artificial intelligence. Okay, okay I toured most of my time I spend actually torching, torching my grad students, doing research on artificial intelligence.
Okay, okay good.
By the way, this is everything I'm for.
Yeah, well you marry me, no kidding.
I want to go, you probably have a question.
That's what I want to go over there.
Well, I saw this documentary on artificial intelligence and what I was surprised to learn
is that it's not about robots, like the Steven Spielberg movie.
It's more about the amount of computing speed
that we now can do such that, like,
I think they said in the documentary,
you can put all the books that have ever been written
into a computer now, and you're gonna tell me
whether I'm right or wrong, I bet I'm close to right, but probably wrong. You can put all the books into a computer now, and you're going to tell me whether I'm right or wrong. I bet I'm close to right, but probably wrong.
You can put all the books into a computer, and the computer will ingest all that information,
separate it out, and be able to give you an answer about anything that you can ask them
if the information was in any of those books from languages to rocks to...
Isn't that called Google, though? of those books from languages to rocks to the,
I mean, isn't that called Google though?
Well, I'm sure you could explain that,
but it's like that's artificial intelligence.
That's, well, yes and no.
So on one hand, yeah, you can take all the books
that were printed and put them on a memory card.
It's so small that you might have a hard time finding it
in your pocket, but that doesn't mean that a computer necessarily understands what's there, just because it can
store it and kind of regurgitate it back to you, right?
And I think the truth is, despite a lot of hype, that artificial intelligence is still
mostly pretty dumb today compared to humans or even cats and dogs.
But, you know, that doesn't mean it's gonna remain that way.
I think a lot of people make the huge mistake of thinking just because AI is kind of dumb today,
it's always gonna be that way.
Right. Well, shouldn't we keep it dumb because if we let it get too smart, et cetera?
What is that threshold of the point of no return?
Yeah, because remember that thing about Facebook where they started, I don't know if this is true,
they started doing like AI technology,
they just started talking to each other
and they shut it down, is that true?
They were gossiping.
Yeah.
It's true, but I think Hollywood and media often
make us worry about the wrong things.
They, they, they, the, what do you mean?
Yeah. First of all, people often ask me, things. What do you mean?
First of all, people often ask me if I should fear AI or be excited about it.
The answer is obviously both.
AI is like any technology.
It's not evil or good.
If I ask you, what about fire?
How do you feel?
I'm forward or against it.
What are you going to say?
Right.
It can hurt if you use it incorrectly.
Exactly.
And the same thing with all of the technology,
the only difference is that AI is going
to be the most powerful technology ever.
Because look, why is it that we humans here
are the most powerful species on this planet?
Fuckin' A.
Is it because we have bigger biceps, sharper teeth?
Then the tigers know it's because we're smarter, right?
So obviously, if we make machines that are way smarter than us, which is obviously possible
and most researchers in the field think it's going to happen in our lifetime, then it's
either going to clearly either going to be the best thing ever or the worst thing ever.
Yeah, so my question is, when it's the worst thing ever, by the time it becomes the worst thing ever,
then we're fucked.
Then it's too late, yeah, you want to kind of...
So let it be the worst thing ever.
So that's the catch, though.
We humans have had to play this game over and over again
with where technology got more powerful.
I mean, we're trying to win this race,
making sure the wisdom with which you manage the tech
keeps pace with the power manage the tech keeps pace with
the power of the tech.
And we always use the same strategy, learn from mistakes.
But it seems like the big safeguard that we have as humans, that we don't yet have with
machines, is that we have ethics, we have empathy, we have emotion.
And what is the computer program that you would need to put together to inject that into this new machine with all
of this information.
We put some snuggles in it.
Yeah.
That's a fantastic question.
What's the snuggles recipe?
So you're hitting exactly my wish list.
If you want to have ever more powerful AI that's actually beneficial for humanity, right?
So you can be excited, right?
I'm horrified about the future.
There are three things you're going to need.
First, you're going to want to need the AI
to understand our human goals.
And then get it to actually adopt the goals,
and then to actually keep those goals as it gets smarter.
And if you think about it for a little longer,
each of these are really hard.
So suppose you have a tell your future self-driving card
and take you to Logan Airport as fast as possible.
And then you get their covered in vomit
and chased by helicopters and you're like
That's not what I meant. Yeah, and the car goes like that's exactly what you ask for you know, it's clearly
like they do talk like that literally
Literally are you he's the Terminator? He sounds like the Terminator and he's talking about Terminator stuff
So we humans have so much more
background knowledge
that a machine doesn't take over,
because it's like very alien species of a source.
So that's hard for starters.
And then, suppose you can get that right.
Now, let me stop you there.
Is there any chance of getting that right?
In other words, the formula, the equation
that equals emotion, responsibility, ethics,
can you even create a computer equation for that?
I think right now we don't know how to do it.
It's probably possible.
We were not working enough on it.
Yeah, the catch is, for computers,
or just like, if you think of a baby, six months old,
you're not going to explain the fine details of ethics
to them, because they can't quite get it yet. By the time they're a teenager, they're not going to
sit to you anymore. Those of you who have kids out there, right? So, but you have a window
with human children while when they're smart enough to get it and may still malleable enough
to hopefully pay attention, right? With computers though, they might blow through that so quickly
that window. Did you see X Machina? Did anybody see X Machina? with computers though, they might blow through that so quickly.
That window.
Did you see X Machina? Did anybody see X Machina?
Yeah, that's amazing.
That's amazing.
What did you see?
Yeah, let's put that for X Machina.
No, what is the most accurate film to science?
Like, is it how in 2001 or X Machina?
Those are my top two actually, because how emphasizes this key thing that the thing you should really fear in an advanced
AI is not that it's going to turn evil, but that it's going to just turn really competent
and not have its goals aligned with yours.
That's what happens in how, like, no spoilers.
Right.
And like that, taxi, I mean.
60 years in were good, but.
But then the other thing you should also worry about is even if you can solve all these things
And I think it might take 30 years to figure this out, which is where we should start now
Not you know the night before some folks on too much red bull switching on right?
I mean I got two cans in me right now
Not in the can not in my can but in super tellers away from
Okay, but the other thing is even if you manage to solve those technical problems, which we should have more
research on, you also have to worry about human society.
Because just think for a moment about your least favorite
leader on the planet.
Don't tell me who it is.
So we don't offend anyone in the audience.
Thank you for thinking about it.
You're just a leader.
Imagine their face for a moment here.
And they imagine they are the one who controls the first superintelligence and take control
over the whole planet and impose their will.
How does that make you feel?
Yeah, not good.
None of it makes me feel great.
Listen, after a lifetime of doing all this stuff
with the right, how does it feel to talk to an actual robot?
Like that must feel...
Yeah.
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How so is there is do do people have proprietary right over certain stuff or does one country control a lot like who's leading China's leading the AI is are they
not us in China are both very strong I mean most research suggests that it's
us is still kind of ahead but there there's a lot of hype around both countries
of course try to try to research how in USA I'm gonna lose it and I'll bet one
day and I'll bet and I'll bet when they say the USA, they're talking about MIT
and they're probably talking about him.
Well, you know how it goes.
Both countries are trying to proclaim that the both countries
researchers are trying to claim that the other one
is the heads of it, because you get more funding.
That's how we researchers always do it.
But seriously, the interesting key here,
I think, is ultimately, it's not really, you know, matter which country gets it for.
It's going to matter most, is it going to be us who control the machines,
or are they who control us?
I mean, but it really is.
It's all joking, so I'm obsessed with the Terminator movies and anything.
So I find that.
Sure, all joking aside.
Yeah, joking aside.
Yeah.
Yeah, let's put the jokes aside and in no talk about it.
No, but that's kind of the idea behind a lot of Hollywood movies and stuff.
Is that what if the A.I. has become more intelligent than the human?
But here's the thing, I saw something on 60 minutes years ago,
which fascinates me to this day, and I'm not going to get this right,
but it's some guy.
And he rune's eyebrows. That's it.
No, so...
It's never wonder why.
Never wonder why.
I opened my old desk drawer and I got a tie
from the 1968 Democratic Convention.
It's got soup on it.
I don't like soup.
No one knows who Andy Rooney is.
Yeah, yeah.
It's also his DAC-shepard impression.
But anyway.
It was true.
But anyway, so there is this guy.
The interviewer was interviewing the scientists
who claimed to have come up with this idea.
This thing was wrapped around his ear, and it was tied
to his side of his head.
And the interviewer was asking him a question,
like, what's the population of Utah?
And all he had to do was think of the answer
and it popped up on the screen.
Do you know what I'm talking about? Yeah, well, this sort of stuff you have to do is think of the answer and it popped up on the screen. Do you know what I'm talking about?
This kind of stuff you can already do with your grandma
if you have a connection to Google.
Oh, yeah.
Ergo, you saw it 15 fucking years ago.
What are you talking about?
No, no.
No, no, no, but that you can do.
Oh, can we meet Peter Jamm?
No, that you can, if you think of a response to the computer.
Oh, OK.
And he heard you. That's it. Let of a response that you got it. Okay. Okay.
That's it. Let me move on to another question something current. So you know we were talking earlier about
We're gonna kiss it out later. You mean when you read people's brainwaves?
Well, I found it fascinating. I saw the segment where the guy was thinking and answer
And it popped up on the screen again. Again, the third time is really clear.
Hey, Sean, your best robot voice, go quick.
He's gonna sing Katy Perry watch.
Do you want to play a game of war?
No.
Do you want to play J.S.T.A.K.D.O.?
Another 15-year-old.
Do you want to play J. Tektop? Another 15-year-old. Jason.
Do you want to play a game?
That's it.
That's it.
Just seeing himself up.
This is the voice-over artist here.
Let's have it.
Do you want to play a game?
No matter how I say it, it's just a game.
I'm sorry.
I tried to do that. Do you want to play a game? Yeah. No matter how I say it, it's just the gayest computer ever. I'm sorry.
I tried to do that.
Do you want to play a gay?
Yeah.
Okay, yeah, sorry.
And what's your best computer voice?
I'm sorry, Dave.
I just love that.
I'll sing again, because it's great.
It is great.
It's what you really should worry about. But coming back to, there are two things.
One again, summarize.
You need to make sure the machines can actually
align their goals with ours, because if you have something
much smarter than us, other goals were screwed.
It's like playing chess today against the computer that
has the goal to win when you have, it's no fun.
Well, what's the next, because when somebody says,
hey, I, all I picture are those mechanical dogs that walk around.
And they don't really do anything.
Just like, oh, look, we invented a robot dog,
and it doesn't really do anything.
So I want to know, like, what's the next thing that we can use it
like that's like mechanical cats?
Yeah.
Mechanical cats?
Yeah, no, you know what I mean? Like, what's the, oh, imagine mechanical cats. Yeah. Yeah, you know what I mean?
Imagine mechanical cats doing cats.
Oh my god, we amazing.
Sorry, we'll get back.
You're saying what's the next thing we can look forward to enjoying out of science?
Yeah, in the pop sense.
Okay, in the pop sense.
So first of all, so just to finish off, we talked about, you know, Hollywood makes us associate AI so much with robots and the Boston
Dynamics dogs.
And you should check them dancing, by the way, if you haven't.
Dancing dogs?
The dancing Boston Dynamics robots.
Super cool.
But the biggest impact right now AI is having is actually not robots at all.
It's just software.
I mentioned this, improve the news, the work project we're
doing, which is just a little academic thing, but if you think about social media, that's
all about AI. One of the reasons people hate each other so much more in America now is
the effect of AI, not AI that had the goal of making people evil, but just had the goal
of making people watch as many ads as possible. But the AI was so smart, figuring out how to manipulate people
into watching ads that it realized that the best way to do it
is to make them really angry and keep showing
the more and more extreme stuff until they were so angry
they wouldn't just fragment and feel
they're really pissed off.
You then research that thing even more
and then you get more ads and all that stuff.
So that's one.
All of social media, I mean, yeah.
And the other one is,
let's talk about positive things because AI intelligence, right? It's human intelligence
that's given us everything we like about civilization. So clearly, if we can amplify it with artificial intelligence,
we can use it to solve all sorts of problems. We're stumped on now, like cancer and lifting everybody out of poverty and so on.
Well, there ever be, so we go ahead, sorry.
Yeah, no.
So I was just going to say, like, another pure software thing that has nothing to do with
bots is use AI for doing better science, better medical research.
For example.
Can I ask about that?
So is there any, like I read a long time ago about like, you know, like you put a locator
chip in your dog or you cat, whatever, you, I heard that they might be making a chip
that has all your medical files
and you put it under your skin so you can just scan it
because filling out all those fucking forms over and over.
It's like, I just, I just filled out the form
and now you're asking me the questions all over again.
Read the thing, I just got 20 minutes off.
I'm not, I'm dying.
I'm dying.
Right, I'm like, what?
And it's like, what's your name?
I just filled three forms out that says what my name.
I think I personally get a pass on that ship implant
and just ask the hospital to have a less stone age
computer system, but the series live course.
Did you care about Sean showing up
to doctor's appointments late so that he doesn't have to wait?
It's riveting.
I don't know if that's AI or whatever.
Something huge that happened this year, for example, is biologists have spent 50 years trying
to figure out just from the DNA how the shape is going to turn out to be of different proteins
that our bodies make.
It's called a protein folding problem.
And then Google DeepMind solved it.
No way.
Yeah, with an AI.
And now you can develop medicines faster.
So this is a fantastic example, I think, of AI for good.
Another one.
But then the robots that are having probably
that are going to have the biggest effect, I think,
on us and the job market in the next five years,
are probably cars, actually.
This is autonomous vehicles.
That's pretty cool.
I'm worried about everybody with their cars
and the automatic driving or whatever,
and then they show up, and then people just gonna show up
at the valley, like dead in their car.
It's gonna be really, you know what I mean?
Like people are gonna get in their car,
and then they're gonna be like,
the pizza guy shows up, and he's like slumped over.
You're open the door.
They're open the door.
Yeah, just out.
You know what I mean?
Like that's what I'm worried about.
Now, with the combination of what you know about computers,
what you know about space, what you know about intelligence,
I know, I know what you want to know.
You know what I'm asking for?
Yes, John wants to know.
He wants to know if there's aliens,
but we're not going to ask him that.
No, not that.
What I think is something about you.
What I want to know from you is, is it based on your knowledge of all those areas,
does it seem possible to you that there is the requisite amount of intelligence
and technology at a place other than Earth?
Ooh, see, he asks, is it a different way than I would?
Well, of course, he's a different way than I would. Well, of course it's possible, although, you know, my guess, based on spending a lot of
years dealing with telescopes and thinking about these things is that when we, for the
first time, get way more advanced technological intelligence showing up on this planet, it's
probably going to be in our lifetime, and
it's probably not going to come from outer space.
It's going to be something we built.
What do you mean?
What do you mean?
So you're saying maybe, when you're building something to bring them here, what do you
say?
No, I mean, we're basically, if the goal of artificial intelligence has always been to build
stuff that's part of that.
Yeah, they just don't have cars.
They need to get here.
So you're basically, oh, they're basically going to be dead when they get here?
No way, keep going.
So we're really, if you basically build a new species,
a new life form, that's way, way smarter than us.
Yeah.
Right?
Yeah.
That's alien.
That's alien.
That's incredibly alien.
It's much more different from a chipmunk or a tiger
and that it really has nothing in common
with our evolutionary history.
Nothing doesn't necessarily care even about food
or reproducing itself.
So if we do that, it's going to be just as big
an event on Earth as if aliens show up.
And that's why I'm kind of weirded out
that people talk so little bit about this.
That's what I'm saying.
That's what I'm saying.
As despicable as human beings were all, and gloomy, everybody,
we're just so despicable that if the announcement came
that like, oh my God, there are aliens from there,
they're visiting our planet, people be like,
oh, okay, I gotta check my Instagram.
Like, I don't think people would be like, give it to me.
Based on that, it seems to me that what you would wanna do
is make sure that somehow built in all this stuff
is some kind of a kill switch.
And that the wise men who are,
and women, you know what I mean,
but like a group, right?
Probably made up of you and your other colleagues,
male or female from around the world
that are the leading scientists in this area
would get together on some encrypted platform
and say, let's make sure we only us five know about this one thing
that we could press to shut all these AI robots down
that we've created on our way.
I'll be one, I won't tell anybody.
I won't tell anybody.
All four kill switches, all of this is what I do.
I know, let's find bar room.
This sounds a little too, let me just for me,
because the idea that somehow,
you know, I wish I had a dude who were like,
no, a lot about AI, he should decide,
humanity's future.
That's kind of how, I wanted in your hands.
But that's how it is now, you know,
if we don't, if the rest of us,
everybody doesn't get engaged in these things,
who's gonna make all these decisions?
It's gonna be probably a bunch of dudes
in some back room or some who have not been elected.
Are people who are super AI nerds like specialists in what human happiness is?
Only they would know the ramifications of something getting in the wrong hands.
But are they the ones who should be deciding what makes them not some elected weirdo?
Yeah.
So I don't trust particularly elected people, but I also don't trust tech nerds with being
experts in psychology and what they're like.
Who can we trust?
Then we got to show them the best.
Everybody.
I mean, they should trust it to the nerds.
What are you talking about?
Talk about.
Talk about it.
I'm going to ask you guys, suppose you have a magic wand that you can wave, okay, and
create this future 35 years from now, okay?
When there is this very advanced AI,
and you get to decide how the planet is organized,
what it's used for, and what it's not used for.
So it's not gonna be your standard dystopian
Hollywood flick.
What is this future like?
What do you want it to be like?
Well, that makes me want to take a nap.
Oh.
Well, you want me want to take a nap. Well, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, you would, You point it all in that direction, and then good decisions come from that. I don't know.
Yes.
Brave New World.
Yeah.
Well, that sounds great.
So it's a frighteningly expected response.
Let's compare that with what we're most extending AI money on now, right?
So a massive amount of money is spent on advertising, you end up making teenage girls on a rexick, and then we
have a massive amount of enormous amount of money now building robots to kill people.
For the first time, they were used in Libya last year.
They hunted down these fleeing people and just killed them because the robots decided
that they were probably bad guys.
And I think-
I did not know about that.
It's-
I don't know.
Did you guys all know about that? About's a... I don't know.
Did you guys all know about that?
About the robots and hundreds of people down?
Yeah, let's not gloss over that.
What happened?
This is the shit that I'm talking about, man.
Yeah, so it's...
It actually has some dark comedic value, I think.
Yeah, that's hilarious.
The current policy, actually actually of the US government
on killer robots and slaughterbots is three things.
First of all, the US says, you know, these are murder hornets.
First of all, we're saying this is nasty stuff
that we don't ever want to delegate kill decisions to machines.
So we're not going to do it.
Second, it's going to have a decisive impact
on the battlefield.
And third, we're going to reserve the right for all other countries to build them and export
them to whoever they want.
So like this was this Turkish company decided to sell them to Libya against the arms embargo
and that's why they hunted these people down.
We went like a really short span.
We went from replicating a sheep to slaughterbots.
Like it seems like that happened really quickly.
Yeah, man.
And so is there, we had a, we were talking to a guest earlier
today about time travel.
And now, so it's on, it's on our minds.
Now, and'm not...
And we do have to ask you, like we did before,
if you're good to, did you time travel here?
I do.
If...
If...
Is there any chance...
And I won't bore you with the same question that I asked
that astronomer that we had about the mirrors...
At the rest, I said.
It was a real highlight.
Oh, no.
But, yeah.
But in the...
No, because we'll try here.
So, the...
Will said, Neil the Grass Tyson was on.
And Jason asked a really long question
and about time travel.
And Will said,
Hey, do you think we could put enough mirrors
and go travel back in time to the beginning
of Jason's question?
But...
And it's a valid...
It's hard for me. It's question. And it's a valid. It's hard for me.
It's a valid.
It's a valid.
So the light we get from the sun has been traveling seven minutes.
Eight minutes.
Eight minutes.
OK.
So we're basically feeling something that's eight minutes old.
We're back on this.
That's right.
That's right.
Right?
OK.
So isn't there a way to have a mirror that creates anyway?
Yes, actually.
There is.
Well hang on, there is.
He says yes.
He likes my thinking.
I'm sure it will be built for us actually.
In the middle of our galaxy, there's this monster black hole
that weighs about four million times as much as a sun.
And it's black.
Oh, that's mine.
Oh, no, it's a black hole.
Okay. And if you look at it purely carefully,
light that went from you actually
was bent by its gravity so much that it comes back
on the other side of the black hole.
Like, to mirror.
So if you look at the really good telescope,
in principle, you could see your own reflection, except
no way, no way, no way, no way, no way, no way,
that you weren't born yet.
Are you serious?
Oh, wait, so Tom.
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Wait, so talk, go.
So that's basically time to, in other words, these telescopes, like the one we just launched
up the web.
They're looking so far back, they might actually see the big bang at some point, or something
we're seeing the galaxy at an earlier stage than us.
So eventually, if you get a telescope strong enough,
you could see the start of Earth potentially,
so it came all came out a big thing.
We should tell you, we all took mushrooms before.
All right, it's just from the beginning.
Yeah, and we were so interested.
Somewhere in there is there an answer about
a lot of hot pot.
Some of us took a double.
A possibility of time travel.
Yeah, so this is a kind of sea,
but not touch time travel. OK. The sky is a kind of sea, but not touch time travel.
Okay.
The sky is a time machine, just like that.
You see me, three minutes, not time travel.
Yeah, three nanoseconds ago, you see the sun, eight minutes ago, you see stars at night,
if it's clear, so along go the people over there looking at us would see maybe the Boston
Tea Party, and we can see things that happen over 13 billion
years ago.
You can also travel forward in time for real.
I know bullshit, real time travel.
You go to this blockhole here.
That's my...
I was told, actually, when I moved to the US, that America possession is 95% of the law.
I think.
Is that true?
You know what?
Now it's yours.
So anyway, if you just orbit around this black hole really close, which you can actually
do, I give this as a homework problem to my MIT students, then your time will actually slow
down so much that if you're on Skype with you, you'll be hearing him go like, hello, I'm
here.
And then you're gonna hear him say,
oh my God, that's a word of the word,
what's going on there?
Well, that's accurate.
Because, we're times are actually running at different rates.
And then when you come back,
you look so good, so useful.
Because you're actually younger than,
yes, yes, you would have been otherwise.
So are we gonna be alive
when we start to see any of this stuff
that's gonna really blow our minds?
Yeah, and Mars, are we living on Mars, go.
So this is an upside of artificial intelligence.
Roll that window, no.
That's not a follow-up, it's a different subject.
By the way, you mentioned before,
Boston's in party too soon, you know.
This is the upside of artificial intelligence, no.
It's just for us too, though, huh?
This is the last.
This is the upside of artificial intelligence, because either just for us, too, so what? This is the last. This is the upside of artificial intelligence.
Either we can use it to go extinct in our lifetime
or we can use it to bring all these awesome things
about in our lifetime.
We used to think, oh, this is going
to take 10,000 years to get like the sci-fi novels,
because we humans have to figure out all the tech ourselves.
No.
If we can build this incredibly advanced AI that can then
build more advanced AI, et cetera, et cetera,
we might be able to build this tech, you know,
30, 40 years from now.
Right.
And suddenly, we're not limited by our own pace
of developing tech.
We just go, boom, and we're limited by the laws of physics.
Well, and by the laws of ethics,
like if just because we can, should we?
Like, how do we know when we, as a society, are mature enough to handle some of the technology that we can, should we? Like how do we know when we as a society
are mature enough to handle some of the technology
that we can access?
I think going and having some fun,
joy riding around black holes is ethically okay.
Yeah.
It's my inner nerd speaking here.
As long as you don't force other people to go with you.
But on the other hand, that's one of the-
No, man, don't be nervous, just go into the black hole.
So, like, we're not forcing, but it is peer pressure.
The-
The-
The- That's one of the questions that they asked in Jurassic Park was just-
Yeah, good Jurassic Park, good.
Yes, I'm not-
I'm not-
Yes, I'm not.
Just because-
Keep on the science.
Just because you can create this island with these dinosaurs,
Yes. Should you? Now, the- Because you can create this island with these dinosaurs.
Yes.
Should you?
Right.
Based on the science of that, the amber that was frozen in there
with the DNA of the dinosaurs, is that real?
Yes.
Is that real?
Well, now, you know, we have my friend George Church,
down in Harvard here, he's talking about already bringing back the mammoth
by just taking the DNA together assembling it error correcting a scooter than
Basically DNA printing out the mammoth DNA and boom mammoth. We can do a lot of these things
Leaving we can come back to the ethical question. They're just thing him exactly who's what's the what's the key?
Which is name again George church? What's the one to show? What's the count?
That's all that's gonna say yes or no? Let me just say a bigger thing first though, just to get the
controversy out of the way, you know.
I think we humans to really get the ethical decisions right and let
people forfeit some dumb stuff.
You have to remember how much upside there is also.
We're living on this little spinning ball in space where they
almost ate billion people on it and been spending so many years
killing each other over a little bit more sand here
and a little more forest there.
Where in this huge universe, right?
We thought was off-limits?
Well, with AI, it could be on-limits again.
We could go to the Alpha Centauri system in a lifetime.
We could have a future where life is flourishing in our
galaxy and in our other
galaxies, where there's such an amazing abundance that people are going to be wondering, why
did these guys fudge around for so many years in this little planet and fight squabble
about breadcrumbs instead of going on?
Most of this universe, despite all the Star Trek episodes out there No offense
So far really don't seem to have woken up and come alive in any major way
And I feel that we humans
Have a more or less responsibility to see if we can help life
It more our universe wake up some more and help life spread
Well, what if we run out of time with our use on this planet because of environment where we don't I'm reading your mind. Yeah, we're getting to Mars. So can we point the AI to our
challenges here regarding the environment, fix that real quick, and then we can
explore everywhere else? I think we need to fix things here in parallel.
The reason that the main forest is partly gone, the reason we're messing up our climate
and so many other things isn't because we didn't know 10 years ago what to do about it.
It's because we kind of already built another kind of AI, these very powerful systems,
corporations, governments, et cetera, that have goals that aren't so aligned with the
rainforest and maybe the overall goal is of. If we can use the AI to tell them how they can make more profit doing things that aren't so aligned with the rainforest, then maybe the overall goal is over.
If we can use the AI to tell them how they can make more profit
doing things that don't kill the earth,
then they'll stop chopping down the forest.
Well, maybe we should take the biggest step back,
you know, the whole point of having,
I mean, you've got stock and exon, don't you?
He's not comfortable answering this.
My undergrad was an economics.
So I am very sympathetic to the free market.
You're doing things more efficient.
But the whole point of the free market
is that you should get done efficiently things
that you want to get done.
And then you should have, of course, some guidelines.
That's why we decided to ban Shia labor in the US.
That's why we decided to invent the shy labor in the US. That's why we decided
to invent the weekend. So, you know, you don't like the weekend? I think you said it's
very stressful. But right now, we have, if you create something, you know, whether it be
a super powerful dictatorship or it beats the, you know, the back-hole company that tries
to convince you that cancer, that smoking isn't dangerous,
or whatever.
It has its own goals, and it's going to act.
It's good to think of these things a little bit like an AI, even though it's not made
out of robots.
It's made of people.
Because there's no person in a back of a company that's consignal-handedly change its
goals, right?
If the CEO decides to stop selling cigarettes, he's just going to get fired, right? So we should start thinking about how do we just align the incentives of all the companies. I want to keep private companies
incentives of people and incentives of companies and incentives of politicians with the incentives of humanity itself
to get what you were asking for, you know, as a society in the future where we work.
The change is more cultural rather than scientific if you will.
Yeah, although you do need to kick out a bit a lot about the whole business within incentives.
Like, why did we invent the legal system in the US?
Well, because we realize it's not so smart that people always kill each other every time
they get into a squabble about a hot dog, right?
Right, so a consequence.
So you change consequences and not only think twice, and they'll just punch each other instead,
or have said lippons or other way.
We, we, alignment is kind of the big slogan a lot of us nerds have for this.
You want to align the incentives not just the machines but also the organizations with what's actually good for humanity.
And we're in this unfortunate situation now where whenever an entity gets too powerful, it
doesn't have to be a machine or a dictator, it could even be a company, that they start
to now like take over whoever was supposed to regulate them, and turn them into like
a rubber stop.
Now there's suddenly not going to be so lined with what's good for America anymore, or
good for humanity.
And this problem, we cannot wait for AI to solve it.
We have to start solving that in the meantime.
Amen.
But you know, I mean, that's been the modus operandi up till now.
And we are running out of time.
And people are taking their profits
because they figured they're going to be dead
before the ramifications of it really.
Like, so I think the computers have to help us out.
Yes, yes, absolutely. So this is why I'm so into this AI empowerment thing.
I want to think about how can we use AI and put it into the hands of people so that they can very easily
like catch other powerful entities that are trying to screw them over.
And it's a way of using technology to strengthen democracy.
Are we going to live on the moon at all?
You want to?
Yeah.
Is that possible?
Are we planning on that?
Would you want to?
Should I believe that?
Do you want to?
Yeah, I would totally live there.
All of these things are certainly possible.
I was very much of the opinion that it's easier to make a really comfortable and pleasant life on this planet.
So I would also like to make sure I don't ruin it.
Is there one project that you're working on right now, just one that you feel extremely
passionate about right now that you could share with us?
It's actually improvenews.org.
This thing I mentioned earlier.
It's called improvenews.org.
Improve the news.org.
It's just this free little news aggregator,
but it's all powered by machine learning.
So that's why it can actually read 5,000 new
article every day, which I can.
I saw that in that out.
And then what we're doing is, instead of just saying,
OK, today we have a lot of news sites.
You can go there and read about all the good things
that Democrats have done and all the bad things
Republicans have done.
And then there are other ones where you can read about all
the great things that Republicans have done and how the bad things Republicans have done. And then there are other ones where you can read about all the great things the Republicans have done and how the bad things
Democrats have done.
Where this one, the AI figures out which articles are about
the same story.
Maybe it finds now 62 things about the new US national debt
passing 30 trillion or whatever.
And then it's like, OK, then you can come in and say, OK,
here are the facts that all the articles agree on.
Boom, boom, boom. If you're a fact kind of guy, you can now click away say, okay, here are the facts that all the articles agree on. Boom, boom, boom.
If you're a fact kind of guy, you can now click away and go to the next story.
But if you want to know all the narratives, it separates out.
Here is what's the best narrative, that narrative.
So you have photos, would it have a photo of Will last January 6th?
You mean in the capital?
I got a little one.
You got a little one.
No way, with the goggles, to go with the goggles. Yeah.
And the thing, there's no way you're getting that photo.
How much will you pay me again?
Yeah.
What's best wordle score?
Go.
And be careful.
He got an unbeatable score today.
Got it in two.
This guy.
Not bad.
Yeah.
Not bad.
That sounds amazing.
But it's so exciting.
Also just all the emails you get from people, because I think, yeah, bits or free.
You can give them away the world.
And AI is sounds fancy, but it's just code.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Well, listen, I want you with a fresh mind tomorrow when you get back at it, so I don't
want you to stay up later any more today.
Thank you for joining us.
Do you guys feel a little smarter?
Yes, I do.
A little bit smarter.
I feel smarter.
I definitely do.
Please say thank you to Max.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you very, very much, buddy.
Here, pal.
Thank you very much.
Thank you.
Max.
Thank you, Max.
Thank you, Max.
Woo. Woo.
Now here's the thing.
Now, how much?
I, go ahead.
How much dumber do you think you are than him?
Like, on an IQ score, what do you think his score is versus yours?
He reminded me how much smarter I am than you, which was great.
That's fair.
Do you think it's actually, I feel, very void by that whole experience?
Do you think it's double, his until the top of the turn?
Double your, his, over mine? Over mine. Actually, I feel very boyd by that whole experience. Do you think it's double? His and tell the truth?
Double your mind?
His overmind?
Overmind.
Oh, easily.
No, no, no, no.
I mean, he's just, he has a very big brain.
I could talk to him for hours.
I don't know that he would listen to me
for more than five minutes, but I could talk to him for hours.
Yeah.
I love all of the fantastic guests.
Yeah.
Right up my alley. Right up my alley. Very cool. And I think that if I think that if we all
spent more time thinking about that kind of stuff just a little bit that
maybe we could get around to solving some big issues tonight. Let's solve it
tonight guys. Everybody, let it up. Yeah, I'm so cool. Thank you.
I know you.
We all kind of share.
We love all of our guests.
Those are nice pops because there's stuff that we don't usually cover on the podcast.
And I've just repeating myself, but I just love that stuff.
I could ask him a million more questions.
Well, it's the original conceit of this thing, air go the title.
We thought we'd bring people on that can educate us
a little bit more on things that we don't know about.
We happen to get lazy and ask some of our famous fancy friends
to come on.
This is a real treat to be able to access
these big, big thinkers in this incredible town.
So, thanks for having me.
And now, it's incumbent upon us
to really kind of do something about it.
We can't sit around all day in our pajamas,
you know, and in our slippers,
you know what I mean?
Or then just go to the golf course
and then get in our test list.
We have to.
Do you think that's important for,
and I don't want to single anybody.
I will never be one of those people.
The ruining things.
But no, it is true that thank you for you've educated us
a little bit more. It's pretty bad.
And I think, you know, I could talk to them.
I want to talk to them about the web telescope
because, you know, those kinds of things.
Oh god, here comes a buy, everybody.
Get you feel it when it starts to ramp up the engine.
Sean, if you don't land it, you can't do it.
No, you just gotta get into it more subtly.
Well, I'm just saying you a mile ahead.
I'm just saying like telescope, like that is much better
than any thing like this.
What are these call, all those are,
are you scared? Hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, boss, and thank you so much.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
SmartLess is 100% organic and artisanally handcrafted by Michael Grant Terry, Rob Armstrong, and Bennett
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