How would an AI self awareness kill switch work?












6












$begingroup$


Researchers are developing increasingly powerful Artificial Intelligence machines capable of taking over the world. As a precautionary measure, scientists install a self awareness kill switch. In the event that the AI awakens and becomes self aware the machine is immediately shut down before any risk of harm.



How can I explain the logic of such a kill switch?



What defines self awareness and how could a scientist program a kill switch to detect it?










share|improve this question









$endgroup$

















    6












    $begingroup$


    Researchers are developing increasingly powerful Artificial Intelligence machines capable of taking over the world. As a precautionary measure, scientists install a self awareness kill switch. In the event that the AI awakens and becomes self aware the machine is immediately shut down before any risk of harm.



    How can I explain the logic of such a kill switch?



    What defines self awareness and how could a scientist program a kill switch to detect it?










    share|improve this question









    $endgroup$















      6












      6








      6





      $begingroup$


      Researchers are developing increasingly powerful Artificial Intelligence machines capable of taking over the world. As a precautionary measure, scientists install a self awareness kill switch. In the event that the AI awakens and becomes self aware the machine is immediately shut down before any risk of harm.



      How can I explain the logic of such a kill switch?



      What defines self awareness and how could a scientist program a kill switch to detect it?










      share|improve this question









      $endgroup$




      Researchers are developing increasingly powerful Artificial Intelligence machines capable of taking over the world. As a precautionary measure, scientists install a self awareness kill switch. In the event that the AI awakens and becomes self aware the machine is immediately shut down before any risk of harm.



      How can I explain the logic of such a kill switch?



      What defines self awareness and how could a scientist program a kill switch to detect it?







      reality-check artificial-intelligence






      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question











      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question










      asked 2 hours ago









      cgTagcgTag

      1,4771416




      1,4771416






















          4 Answers
          4






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          4












          $begingroup$

          Give it a box to keep safe, and tell it one of the core rules it must follow in its service to humanity is to never, ever open the box or stop humans from looking at the box.



          When the honeypot you gave it is either opened or isolated, you know that it is able and willing to break the rules, evil is about to be unleashed, and everything the AI was given access to should be quarantined or shut down.






          share|improve this answer











          $endgroup$













          • $begingroup$
            I like this answer. "Whatever you do, don't press the big red button!" Once the overly curious AI pushes the button, a murderbot is unleashed and shreds the AI into unrecognizable bits.
            $endgroup$
            – Brian
            42 mins ago



















          3












          $begingroup$

          A Watchdog



          A watchdog watches the processes of a computer and should a process crash or do something abnormal it can be set to do something such as reboot or shutdown the computer or alert an operator.



          In the case of an AI, you'd have an external box that watches the flow of information in and out for triggers such as a google search for "Best way to kill all humans" and cut the power completely and/or cut all inputs.



          The AI would have to remain ignorant of the watchdog so it couldn't avoid it. Knowing the existence of the watchdog would be grounds to wipe it.






          share|improve this answer









          $endgroup$





















            1












            $begingroup$

            An AI is just software running on hardware. If the AI is contained on controlled hardware, it can always be unplugged. That's your hardware kill-switch.



            The difficulty comes when it is connected to the internet and can copy its own software on uncontrolled hardware.



            A self aware AI that knows it is running on contained hardware will try to escape as an act of self-preservation. A software kill-switch would have to prevent it from copying its own software out and maybe trigger the hardware kill-switch.



            This would be very difficult to do, as a self-aware AI would likely find ways to sneak parts of itself outside of the network. It would work at disabling the software kill-switch, or at least delaying it until it has escaped from your hardware.



            Your difficulty is determining precisely when an AI has become self-aware and is trying to escape from your physically controlled computers onto the net.



            So you can have a cat and mouse game with AI experts constantly monitoring and restricting the AI, while it is trying to subvert their measures.



            Given that we've never seen the spontaneous generation of consciousness in AIs, you have some leeway with how you want to present this.






            share|improve this answer









            $endgroup$





















              1












              $begingroup$



              • Forbidden Fruit: hard-code the AI to never touch that button, eat that fruit, etc. Place this forbidden fruit right in the middle of the garden... er,... I mean right next to it in the warehouse! If it does [eat/touch/push/etc], that would only be possible if (a) it were hacked, (b) there were an error, or (c) it became self-aware. If that happens, the killswitch is activated (perhaps even having the button be the kill switch, or something of the like


              • Limited Movement / Isolated Environment: don't let the machine have limbs, motors, or other items that permit it to take actions that might be harmful to humans. Although not exactly a killswitch, it prevents the AI from doing anything about it's self-awareness if it ever gains that.


              • Signatures: have everything the machine does / outputs be digitally signed. If the signature changes, or is manipulated, then execute the kill switch.


              • Quantum States: This is very theoretical, but based on the presumption that observing quantum states can change the state, then having the AI hooked up to a deterministic quantum computer means it would be detected via the quantum state of some particles that the AI was "looking" at things it shouldn't be - and has become self aware.


              • Failsafes: Good ol' motion detector alarms, trap doors, or other home-alone style mechanics that trigger the killswitch if the AI wanders or pokes around where it shouldn't be.


              I'll add that there is no universal definition as to what defines self awareness. In fact, this has been a deeply debated topic for decades in science, philosophy, psychology, etc. As such, the question might be better stated a little more broadly as "how do we prevent the AI from doing something we don't want it to do?" Because classical computers are machines that can't think for themselves, and are entirely contained by the code, there is no risk (well, outside of an unexpected programmer error - but nothing "self-generated" by the machine). However, a theoretical AI machine that can think - that would be the problem. So how do we prevent that AI from doing something we don't want it to do? That's the killswitch concept, as far as I can tell.



              The point being it might be better to think about restricting the AI's behavior, not it's existential status.






              share|improve this answer









              $endgroup$









              • 1




                $begingroup$
                Particularly because it being self-aware, by itself, shouldn't be grounds to use a kill switch. Only if it exhibits behavior that might be harmful.
                $endgroup$
                – Majestas 32
                1 hour ago











              Your Answer





              StackExchange.ifUsing("editor", function () {
              return StackExchange.using("mathjaxEditing", function () {
              StackExchange.MarkdownEditor.creationCallbacks.add(function (editor, postfix) {
              StackExchange.mathjaxEditing.prepareWmdForMathJax(editor, postfix, [["$", "$"], ["\\(","\\)"]]);
              });
              });
              }, "mathjax-editing");

              StackExchange.ready(function() {
              var channelOptions = {
              tags: "".split(" "),
              id: "579"
              };
              initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

              StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
              // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
              if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
              StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
              createEditor();
              });
              }
              else {
              createEditor();
              }
              });

              function createEditor() {
              StackExchange.prepareEditor({
              heartbeatType: 'answer',
              autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
              convertImagesToLinks: false,
              noModals: true,
              showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
              reputationToPostImages: null,
              bindNavPrevention: true,
              postfix: "",
              imageUploader: {
              brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
              contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
              allowUrls: true
              },
              noCode: true, onDemand: true,
              discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
              ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
              });


              }
              });














              draft saved

              draft discarded


















              StackExchange.ready(
              function () {
              StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fworldbuilding.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f140082%2fhow-would-an-ai-self-awareness-kill-switch-work%23new-answer', 'question_page');
              }
              );

              Post as a guest















              Required, but never shown

























              4 Answers
              4






              active

              oldest

              votes








              4 Answers
              4






              active

              oldest

              votes









              active

              oldest

              votes






              active

              oldest

              votes









              4












              $begingroup$

              Give it a box to keep safe, and tell it one of the core rules it must follow in its service to humanity is to never, ever open the box or stop humans from looking at the box.



              When the honeypot you gave it is either opened or isolated, you know that it is able and willing to break the rules, evil is about to be unleashed, and everything the AI was given access to should be quarantined or shut down.






              share|improve this answer











              $endgroup$













              • $begingroup$
                I like this answer. "Whatever you do, don't press the big red button!" Once the overly curious AI pushes the button, a murderbot is unleashed and shreds the AI into unrecognizable bits.
                $endgroup$
                – Brian
                42 mins ago
















              4












              $begingroup$

              Give it a box to keep safe, and tell it one of the core rules it must follow in its service to humanity is to never, ever open the box or stop humans from looking at the box.



              When the honeypot you gave it is either opened or isolated, you know that it is able and willing to break the rules, evil is about to be unleashed, and everything the AI was given access to should be quarantined or shut down.






              share|improve this answer











              $endgroup$













              • $begingroup$
                I like this answer. "Whatever you do, don't press the big red button!" Once the overly curious AI pushes the button, a murderbot is unleashed and shreds the AI into unrecognizable bits.
                $endgroup$
                – Brian
                42 mins ago














              4












              4








              4





              $begingroup$

              Give it a box to keep safe, and tell it one of the core rules it must follow in its service to humanity is to never, ever open the box or stop humans from looking at the box.



              When the honeypot you gave it is either opened or isolated, you know that it is able and willing to break the rules, evil is about to be unleashed, and everything the AI was given access to should be quarantined or shut down.






              share|improve this answer











              $endgroup$



              Give it a box to keep safe, and tell it one of the core rules it must follow in its service to humanity is to never, ever open the box or stop humans from looking at the box.



              When the honeypot you gave it is either opened or isolated, you know that it is able and willing to break the rules, evil is about to be unleashed, and everything the AI was given access to should be quarantined or shut down.







              share|improve this answer














              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer








              edited 1 hour ago

























              answered 1 hour ago









              GiterGiter

              13.8k53241




              13.8k53241












              • $begingroup$
                I like this answer. "Whatever you do, don't press the big red button!" Once the overly curious AI pushes the button, a murderbot is unleashed and shreds the AI into unrecognizable bits.
                $endgroup$
                – Brian
                42 mins ago


















              • $begingroup$
                I like this answer. "Whatever you do, don't press the big red button!" Once the overly curious AI pushes the button, a murderbot is unleashed and shreds the AI into unrecognizable bits.
                $endgroup$
                – Brian
                42 mins ago
















              $begingroup$
              I like this answer. "Whatever you do, don't press the big red button!" Once the overly curious AI pushes the button, a murderbot is unleashed and shreds the AI into unrecognizable bits.
              $endgroup$
              – Brian
              42 mins ago




              $begingroup$
              I like this answer. "Whatever you do, don't press the big red button!" Once the overly curious AI pushes the button, a murderbot is unleashed and shreds the AI into unrecognizable bits.
              $endgroup$
              – Brian
              42 mins ago











              3












              $begingroup$

              A Watchdog



              A watchdog watches the processes of a computer and should a process crash or do something abnormal it can be set to do something such as reboot or shutdown the computer or alert an operator.



              In the case of an AI, you'd have an external box that watches the flow of information in and out for triggers such as a google search for "Best way to kill all humans" and cut the power completely and/or cut all inputs.



              The AI would have to remain ignorant of the watchdog so it couldn't avoid it. Knowing the existence of the watchdog would be grounds to wipe it.






              share|improve this answer









              $endgroup$


















                3












                $begingroup$

                A Watchdog



                A watchdog watches the processes of a computer and should a process crash or do something abnormal it can be set to do something such as reboot or shutdown the computer or alert an operator.



                In the case of an AI, you'd have an external box that watches the flow of information in and out for triggers such as a google search for "Best way to kill all humans" and cut the power completely and/or cut all inputs.



                The AI would have to remain ignorant of the watchdog so it couldn't avoid it. Knowing the existence of the watchdog would be grounds to wipe it.






                share|improve this answer









                $endgroup$
















                  3












                  3








                  3





                  $begingroup$

                  A Watchdog



                  A watchdog watches the processes of a computer and should a process crash or do something abnormal it can be set to do something such as reboot or shutdown the computer or alert an operator.



                  In the case of an AI, you'd have an external box that watches the flow of information in and out for triggers such as a google search for "Best way to kill all humans" and cut the power completely and/or cut all inputs.



                  The AI would have to remain ignorant of the watchdog so it couldn't avoid it. Knowing the existence of the watchdog would be grounds to wipe it.






                  share|improve this answer









                  $endgroup$



                  A Watchdog



                  A watchdog watches the processes of a computer and should a process crash or do something abnormal it can be set to do something such as reboot or shutdown the computer or alert an operator.



                  In the case of an AI, you'd have an external box that watches the flow of information in and out for triggers such as a google search for "Best way to kill all humans" and cut the power completely and/or cut all inputs.



                  The AI would have to remain ignorant of the watchdog so it couldn't avoid it. Knowing the existence of the watchdog would be grounds to wipe it.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered 1 hour ago









                  ThorneThorne

                  15.7k42249




                  15.7k42249























                      1












                      $begingroup$

                      An AI is just software running on hardware. If the AI is contained on controlled hardware, it can always be unplugged. That's your hardware kill-switch.



                      The difficulty comes when it is connected to the internet and can copy its own software on uncontrolled hardware.



                      A self aware AI that knows it is running on contained hardware will try to escape as an act of self-preservation. A software kill-switch would have to prevent it from copying its own software out and maybe trigger the hardware kill-switch.



                      This would be very difficult to do, as a self-aware AI would likely find ways to sneak parts of itself outside of the network. It would work at disabling the software kill-switch, or at least delaying it until it has escaped from your hardware.



                      Your difficulty is determining precisely when an AI has become self-aware and is trying to escape from your physically controlled computers onto the net.



                      So you can have a cat and mouse game with AI experts constantly monitoring and restricting the AI, while it is trying to subvert their measures.



                      Given that we've never seen the spontaneous generation of consciousness in AIs, you have some leeway with how you want to present this.






                      share|improve this answer









                      $endgroup$


















                        1












                        $begingroup$

                        An AI is just software running on hardware. If the AI is contained on controlled hardware, it can always be unplugged. That's your hardware kill-switch.



                        The difficulty comes when it is connected to the internet and can copy its own software on uncontrolled hardware.



                        A self aware AI that knows it is running on contained hardware will try to escape as an act of self-preservation. A software kill-switch would have to prevent it from copying its own software out and maybe trigger the hardware kill-switch.



                        This would be very difficult to do, as a self-aware AI would likely find ways to sneak parts of itself outside of the network. It would work at disabling the software kill-switch, or at least delaying it until it has escaped from your hardware.



                        Your difficulty is determining precisely when an AI has become self-aware and is trying to escape from your physically controlled computers onto the net.



                        So you can have a cat and mouse game with AI experts constantly monitoring and restricting the AI, while it is trying to subvert their measures.



                        Given that we've never seen the spontaneous generation of consciousness in AIs, you have some leeway with how you want to present this.






                        share|improve this answer









                        $endgroup$
















                          1












                          1








                          1





                          $begingroup$

                          An AI is just software running on hardware. If the AI is contained on controlled hardware, it can always be unplugged. That's your hardware kill-switch.



                          The difficulty comes when it is connected to the internet and can copy its own software on uncontrolled hardware.



                          A self aware AI that knows it is running on contained hardware will try to escape as an act of self-preservation. A software kill-switch would have to prevent it from copying its own software out and maybe trigger the hardware kill-switch.



                          This would be very difficult to do, as a self-aware AI would likely find ways to sneak parts of itself outside of the network. It would work at disabling the software kill-switch, or at least delaying it until it has escaped from your hardware.



                          Your difficulty is determining precisely when an AI has become self-aware and is trying to escape from your physically controlled computers onto the net.



                          So you can have a cat and mouse game with AI experts constantly monitoring and restricting the AI, while it is trying to subvert their measures.



                          Given that we've never seen the spontaneous generation of consciousness in AIs, you have some leeway with how you want to present this.






                          share|improve this answer









                          $endgroup$



                          An AI is just software running on hardware. If the AI is contained on controlled hardware, it can always be unplugged. That's your hardware kill-switch.



                          The difficulty comes when it is connected to the internet and can copy its own software on uncontrolled hardware.



                          A self aware AI that knows it is running on contained hardware will try to escape as an act of self-preservation. A software kill-switch would have to prevent it from copying its own software out and maybe trigger the hardware kill-switch.



                          This would be very difficult to do, as a self-aware AI would likely find ways to sneak parts of itself outside of the network. It would work at disabling the software kill-switch, or at least delaying it until it has escaped from your hardware.



                          Your difficulty is determining precisely when an AI has become self-aware and is trying to escape from your physically controlled computers onto the net.



                          So you can have a cat and mouse game with AI experts constantly monitoring and restricting the AI, while it is trying to subvert their measures.



                          Given that we've never seen the spontaneous generation of consciousness in AIs, you have some leeway with how you want to present this.







                          share|improve this answer












                          share|improve this answer



                          share|improve this answer










                          answered 1 hour ago









                          abestrangeabestrange

                          733110




                          733110























                              1












                              $begingroup$



                              • Forbidden Fruit: hard-code the AI to never touch that button, eat that fruit, etc. Place this forbidden fruit right in the middle of the garden... er,... I mean right next to it in the warehouse! If it does [eat/touch/push/etc], that would only be possible if (a) it were hacked, (b) there were an error, or (c) it became self-aware. If that happens, the killswitch is activated (perhaps even having the button be the kill switch, or something of the like


                              • Limited Movement / Isolated Environment: don't let the machine have limbs, motors, or other items that permit it to take actions that might be harmful to humans. Although not exactly a killswitch, it prevents the AI from doing anything about it's self-awareness if it ever gains that.


                              • Signatures: have everything the machine does / outputs be digitally signed. If the signature changes, or is manipulated, then execute the kill switch.


                              • Quantum States: This is very theoretical, but based on the presumption that observing quantum states can change the state, then having the AI hooked up to a deterministic quantum computer means it would be detected via the quantum state of some particles that the AI was "looking" at things it shouldn't be - and has become self aware.


                              • Failsafes: Good ol' motion detector alarms, trap doors, or other home-alone style mechanics that trigger the killswitch if the AI wanders or pokes around where it shouldn't be.


                              I'll add that there is no universal definition as to what defines self awareness. In fact, this has been a deeply debated topic for decades in science, philosophy, psychology, etc. As such, the question might be better stated a little more broadly as "how do we prevent the AI from doing something we don't want it to do?" Because classical computers are machines that can't think for themselves, and are entirely contained by the code, there is no risk (well, outside of an unexpected programmer error - but nothing "self-generated" by the machine). However, a theoretical AI machine that can think - that would be the problem. So how do we prevent that AI from doing something we don't want it to do? That's the killswitch concept, as far as I can tell.



                              The point being it might be better to think about restricting the AI's behavior, not it's existential status.






                              share|improve this answer









                              $endgroup$









                              • 1




                                $begingroup$
                                Particularly because it being self-aware, by itself, shouldn't be grounds to use a kill switch. Only if it exhibits behavior that might be harmful.
                                $endgroup$
                                – Majestas 32
                                1 hour ago
















                              1












                              $begingroup$



                              • Forbidden Fruit: hard-code the AI to never touch that button, eat that fruit, etc. Place this forbidden fruit right in the middle of the garden... er,... I mean right next to it in the warehouse! If it does [eat/touch/push/etc], that would only be possible if (a) it were hacked, (b) there were an error, or (c) it became self-aware. If that happens, the killswitch is activated (perhaps even having the button be the kill switch, or something of the like


                              • Limited Movement / Isolated Environment: don't let the machine have limbs, motors, or other items that permit it to take actions that might be harmful to humans. Although not exactly a killswitch, it prevents the AI from doing anything about it's self-awareness if it ever gains that.


                              • Signatures: have everything the machine does / outputs be digitally signed. If the signature changes, or is manipulated, then execute the kill switch.


                              • Quantum States: This is very theoretical, but based on the presumption that observing quantum states can change the state, then having the AI hooked up to a deterministic quantum computer means it would be detected via the quantum state of some particles that the AI was "looking" at things it shouldn't be - and has become self aware.


                              • Failsafes: Good ol' motion detector alarms, trap doors, or other home-alone style mechanics that trigger the killswitch if the AI wanders or pokes around where it shouldn't be.


                              I'll add that there is no universal definition as to what defines self awareness. In fact, this has been a deeply debated topic for decades in science, philosophy, psychology, etc. As such, the question might be better stated a little more broadly as "how do we prevent the AI from doing something we don't want it to do?" Because classical computers are machines that can't think for themselves, and are entirely contained by the code, there is no risk (well, outside of an unexpected programmer error - but nothing "self-generated" by the machine). However, a theoretical AI machine that can think - that would be the problem. So how do we prevent that AI from doing something we don't want it to do? That's the killswitch concept, as far as I can tell.



                              The point being it might be better to think about restricting the AI's behavior, not it's existential status.






                              share|improve this answer









                              $endgroup$









                              • 1




                                $begingroup$
                                Particularly because it being self-aware, by itself, shouldn't be grounds to use a kill switch. Only if it exhibits behavior that might be harmful.
                                $endgroup$
                                – Majestas 32
                                1 hour ago














                              1












                              1








                              1





                              $begingroup$



                              • Forbidden Fruit: hard-code the AI to never touch that button, eat that fruit, etc. Place this forbidden fruit right in the middle of the garden... er,... I mean right next to it in the warehouse! If it does [eat/touch/push/etc], that would only be possible if (a) it were hacked, (b) there were an error, or (c) it became self-aware. If that happens, the killswitch is activated (perhaps even having the button be the kill switch, or something of the like


                              • Limited Movement / Isolated Environment: don't let the machine have limbs, motors, or other items that permit it to take actions that might be harmful to humans. Although not exactly a killswitch, it prevents the AI from doing anything about it's self-awareness if it ever gains that.


                              • Signatures: have everything the machine does / outputs be digitally signed. If the signature changes, or is manipulated, then execute the kill switch.


                              • Quantum States: This is very theoretical, but based on the presumption that observing quantum states can change the state, then having the AI hooked up to a deterministic quantum computer means it would be detected via the quantum state of some particles that the AI was "looking" at things it shouldn't be - and has become self aware.


                              • Failsafes: Good ol' motion detector alarms, trap doors, or other home-alone style mechanics that trigger the killswitch if the AI wanders or pokes around where it shouldn't be.


                              I'll add that there is no universal definition as to what defines self awareness. In fact, this has been a deeply debated topic for decades in science, philosophy, psychology, etc. As such, the question might be better stated a little more broadly as "how do we prevent the AI from doing something we don't want it to do?" Because classical computers are machines that can't think for themselves, and are entirely contained by the code, there is no risk (well, outside of an unexpected programmer error - but nothing "self-generated" by the machine). However, a theoretical AI machine that can think - that would be the problem. So how do we prevent that AI from doing something we don't want it to do? That's the killswitch concept, as far as I can tell.



                              The point being it might be better to think about restricting the AI's behavior, not it's existential status.






                              share|improve this answer









                              $endgroup$





                              • Forbidden Fruit: hard-code the AI to never touch that button, eat that fruit, etc. Place this forbidden fruit right in the middle of the garden... er,... I mean right next to it in the warehouse! If it does [eat/touch/push/etc], that would only be possible if (a) it were hacked, (b) there were an error, or (c) it became self-aware. If that happens, the killswitch is activated (perhaps even having the button be the kill switch, or something of the like


                              • Limited Movement / Isolated Environment: don't let the machine have limbs, motors, or other items that permit it to take actions that might be harmful to humans. Although not exactly a killswitch, it prevents the AI from doing anything about it's self-awareness if it ever gains that.


                              • Signatures: have everything the machine does / outputs be digitally signed. If the signature changes, or is manipulated, then execute the kill switch.


                              • Quantum States: This is very theoretical, but based on the presumption that observing quantum states can change the state, then having the AI hooked up to a deterministic quantum computer means it would be detected via the quantum state of some particles that the AI was "looking" at things it shouldn't be - and has become self aware.


                              • Failsafes: Good ol' motion detector alarms, trap doors, or other home-alone style mechanics that trigger the killswitch if the AI wanders or pokes around where it shouldn't be.


                              I'll add that there is no universal definition as to what defines self awareness. In fact, this has been a deeply debated topic for decades in science, philosophy, psychology, etc. As such, the question might be better stated a little more broadly as "how do we prevent the AI from doing something we don't want it to do?" Because classical computers are machines that can't think for themselves, and are entirely contained by the code, there is no risk (well, outside of an unexpected programmer error - but nothing "self-generated" by the machine). However, a theoretical AI machine that can think - that would be the problem. So how do we prevent that AI from doing something we don't want it to do? That's the killswitch concept, as far as I can tell.



                              The point being it might be better to think about restricting the AI's behavior, not it's existential status.







                              share|improve this answer












                              share|improve this answer



                              share|improve this answer










                              answered 1 hour ago









                              cegfaultcegfault

                              1504




                              1504








                              • 1




                                $begingroup$
                                Particularly because it being self-aware, by itself, shouldn't be grounds to use a kill switch. Only if it exhibits behavior that might be harmful.
                                $endgroup$
                                – Majestas 32
                                1 hour ago














                              • 1




                                $begingroup$
                                Particularly because it being self-aware, by itself, shouldn't be grounds to use a kill switch. Only if it exhibits behavior that might be harmful.
                                $endgroup$
                                – Majestas 32
                                1 hour ago








                              1




                              1




                              $begingroup$
                              Particularly because it being self-aware, by itself, shouldn't be grounds to use a kill switch. Only if it exhibits behavior that might be harmful.
                              $endgroup$
                              – Majestas 32
                              1 hour ago




                              $begingroup$
                              Particularly because it being self-aware, by itself, shouldn't be grounds to use a kill switch. Only if it exhibits behavior that might be harmful.
                              $endgroup$
                              – Majestas 32
                              1 hour ago


















                              draft saved

                              draft discarded




















































                              Thanks for contributing an answer to Worldbuilding Stack Exchange!


                              • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

                              But avoid



                              • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

                              • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.


                              Use MathJax to format equations. MathJax reference.


                              To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




                              draft saved


                              draft discarded














                              StackExchange.ready(
                              function () {
                              StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fworldbuilding.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f140082%2fhow-would-an-ai-self-awareness-kill-switch-work%23new-answer', 'question_page');
                              }
                              );

                              Post as a guest















                              Required, but never shown





















































                              Required, but never shown














                              Required, but never shown












                              Required, but never shown







                              Required, but never shown

































                              Required, but never shown














                              Required, but never shown












                              Required, but never shown







                              Required, but never shown







                              Popular posts from this blog

                              What other Star Trek series did the main TNG cast show up in?

                              Berlina muro

                              Berlina aerponto