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Unlike previous technological revolutions that unfolded over centuries, allowing for societal adaptation, the current AI transition is happening too fast. This speed prevents the development of adequate mitigations, understanding, and defenses. The common-sense intuition that "we are going too fast" is the correct and most important take.
The primary danger from AI in the coming years may not be the technology itself, but society's inability to cope with the rapid, disorienting change it creates. This could lead to a 'civilizational-scale psychosis' as our biological and social structures fail to keep pace, causing a breakdown in identity and order.
The unique danger of an AI-driven transformation is its unprecedented speed. Unlike past revolutions that unfolded over centuries, AI could reshape society in decades or less, overwhelming our institutions' ability to adapt, similar to how it took 50 years to get the Paris Climate Agreement.
The primary danger in AI safety is not a lack of theoretical solutions but the tendency for developers to implement defenses on a "just-in-time" basis. This leads to cutting corners and implementation errors, analogous to how strong cryptography is often defeated by sloppy code, not broken algorithms.
Drawing parallels to the Industrial Revolution, Demis Hassabis warns that AI's societal transformation will be significantly more compressed and impactful. He predicts it will be '10 times bigger' and happen '10 times faster,' unfolding over a single decade rather than a century, demanding rapid adaptation from global institutions.
Leaders at top AI labs publicly state that the pace of AI development is reckless. However, they feel unable to slow down due to a classic game theory dilemma: if one lab pauses for safety, others will race ahead, leaving the cautious player behind.
Demis Hassabis, CEO of Google DeepMind, warns that the societal transition to AGI will be immensely disruptive, happening at a scale and speed ten times greater than the Industrial Revolution. This suggests that historical parallels are inadequate for planning and preparation.
Past technological shifts occurred over decades, allowing labor markets to gradually adjust. AI's disruption is happening over years, a speed that historical models can't account for. This compressed timeline means new jobs and retraining won't happen fast enough, demanding immediate policy interventions like expanded capital ownership.
The key threat from AI isn't just its capability, but the unprecedented speed of its improvement. Unlike past technological shifts that unfolded over decades, AI agent autonomy on complex tasks has grown exponentially in just two years. This rapid acceleration is what financial systems and labor markets are not stress-tested for.
Past industrial revolutions unfolded over 50-100 years, allowing gradual societal adaptation. Today's AI-driven revolution is happening in a compressed timeframe, creating massive wealth shifts because there's no time for individuals or institutions to catch up. Proactive learning is the only defense.
AI's real threat isn't Skynet, but its ability to accelerate society's 'metabolic rate' beyond human capacity for adaptation. This creates constant reorientation, instability, and ultimately a crisis of legitimacy in our institutions.