- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
superintelligence-statement.org
- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
Statement on Superintelligence taken from https://superintelligence-statement.org/
Context: Innovative AI tools may bring unprecedented health and prosperity. However, alongside tools, many leading AI companies have the stated goal of building superintelligence in the coming decade that can significantly outperform all humans on essentially all cognitive tasks. This has raised concerns, ranging from human economic obsolescence and disempowerment, losses of freedom, civil liberties, dignity, and control, to national security risks and even potential human extinction. The succinct statement below aims to create common knowledge of the growing number of experts and public figures who oppose a rush to superintelligence.
Statement: We call for a prohibition on the development of superintelligence, not lifted before there is
- broad scientific consensus that it will be done safely and controllably
- strong public buy-in.


We DON’T HAVE the ability or know-how to create Intelligence of any kind. We really don’t understand intelligence.
Intelligence is a human-made term to describe an abstract phenomenon - it’s not a concrete thing but a spectrum. On one end of that spectrum is a rock: it doesn’t do anything, it just is. On the opposite end lies what we call superintelligence. Somewhere in between are things like a mouse, a sunflower, a human, a large language model, and a dolphin. All of these display some degree of intelligent behavior. It’s not that one is intelligent and another isn’t - it’s that some are more intelligent than others.
While it’s true that we don’t fully understand how intelligence works, it’s false to say we don’t understand it at all or that we’re incapable of creating intelligent systems. The chess opponent on the Atari is an intelligent system. It can acquire, understand, and use information - which fits one of the common definitions of intelligence. It’s what we call a narrow intelligence, because its intelligence is limited to a single domain. It can play chess - and nothing else.
Humans, on the other hand, are generally intelligent. Our intelligence spans multiple independent domains, and we can learn, reason, and adapt across them. We are, by our own definition, the benchmark for general intelligence. Once a system reaches human-level intelligence, it qualifies as generally intelligent. That’s not some cosmic law - it’s an arbitrary threshold we invented.
The reason this benchmark matters is that once something becomes as intelligent as we are, it no longer needs us to improve itself. By definition, we have nothing more to offer it. We’ve raised the tiger cub to adulthood - and now it no longer needs us to feed it. It’s free to feed on us if it so desires.
Yep.
They’ve raised billions, maybe trillions, on the promise they can do it, hoping they’d figure it out in time to keep investors happy.
But they can’t, so this is the proverbial “hold me back bro”.
Their mouths wrote a check their asses can’t cash, so they’re desperate to save face by making it look like something is preventing them from following thru.