OpenAI's Boaz Barak advises individuals to treat AI risk like the nuclear threat of the past. While society should worry about tail risks, individuals should focus on the high-probability space where their actions matter, rather than being paralyzed by a small probability of doom.

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The common analogy of AI to electricity is dangerously rosy. AI is more like fire: a transformative tool that, if mismanaged or weaponized, can spread uncontrollably with devastating consequences. This mental model better prepares us for AI's inherent risks and accelerating power.

Unlike a plague or asteroid, the existential threat of AI is 'entertaining' and 'interesting to think about.' This, combined with its immense potential upside, makes it psychologically difficult to maintain the rational level of concern warranted by the high-risk probabilities cited by its own creators.

The emphasis on long-term, unprovable risks like AI superintelligence is a strategic diversion. It shifts regulatory and safety efforts away from addressing tangible, immediate problems like model inaccuracy and security vulnerabilities, effectively resulting in a lack of meaningful oversight today.

Emmett Shear argues that even a successfully 'solved' technical alignment problem creates an existential risk. A super-powerful tool that perfectly obeys human commands is dangerous because humans lack the wisdom to wield that power safely. Our own flawed and unstable intentions become the source of danger.

The path to surviving superintelligence is political: a global pact to halt its development, mirroring Cold War nuclear strategy. Success hinges on all leaders understanding that anyone building it ensures their own personal destruction, removing any incentive to cheat.

Society rarely bans powerful new technologies, no matter how dangerous. Instead, like with fire, we develop systems to manage risk (e.g., fire departments, alarms). This provides a historical lens for current debates around transformative technologies like AI, suggesting adaptation over prohibition.

The core disagreement between AI safety advocate Max Tegmark and former White House advisor Dean Ball stems from their vastly different probabilities of AI-induced doom. Tegmark’s >90% justifies preemptive regulation, while Ball’s 0.01% favors a reactive, innovation-friendly approach. Their policy stances are downstream of this fundamental risk assessment.

Many top AI CEOs openly admit the extinction-level risks of their work, with some estimating a 25% chance. However, they feel powerless to stop the race. If a CEO paused for safety, investors would simply replace them with someone willing to push forward, creating a systemic trap where everyone sees the danger but no one can afford to hit the brakes.

Bengio admits he unconsciously dismissed catastrophic AI risks for years. The turning point wasn't intellectual but emotional: realizing his work could endanger his own family's future after seeing ChatGPT's capabilities and thinking of his grandson.

Other scientific fields operate under a "precautionary principle," avoiding experiments with even a small chance of catastrophic outcomes (e.g., creating dangerous new lifeforms). The AI industry, however, proceeds with what Bengio calls "crazy risks," ignoring this fundamental safety doctrine.