Thursday, October 3, 2024
Contact    |    RSS icon Twitter icon Facebook icon  
Unexplained Mysteries
You are viewing: Home > News > Extraterrestrial > News story
Welcome Guest ( Login or Register )  
All â–¾
Search Submit

Extraterrestrial

Could AI be to blame for our lack of contact with intelligent aliens ?

May 21, 2024 · Comment icon 50 comments
Cyborg woman with a glowing eye and barbed wire.
Is AI a universal roadblock ? Image Credit: Pixabay / KELLEPICS
What if artificial intelligence was an inevitable roadblock that all intelligent civilizations must overcome ?
Michael Garrett: Artificial intelligence (AI) has progressed at an astounding pace over the last few years. Some scientists are now looking towards the development of artificial superintelligence (ASI) - a form of AI that would not only surpass human intelligence but would not be bound by the learning speeds of humans.

But what if this milestone isn't just a remarkable achievement? What if it also represents a formidable bottleneck in the development of all civilizations, one so challenging that it thwarts their long-term survival?

This idea is at the heart of a research paper I recently published in Acta Astronautica. Could AI be the universe's "great filter" - a threshold so hard to overcome that it prevents most life from evolving into space-faring civilizations?

This is a concept that might explain why the search for extraterrestrial intelligence (Seti) has yet to detect the signatures of advanced technical civilizations elsewhere in the galaxy.

The great filter hypothesis is ultimately a proposed solution to the Fermi Paradox. This questions why, in a universe vast and ancient enough to host billions of potentially habitable planets, we have not detected any signs of alien civilizations. The hypothesis suggests there are insurmountable hurdles in the evolutionary timeline of civilizations that prevent them from developing into space-faring entities.

I believe the emergence of ASI could be such a filter. AI's rapid advancement, potentially leading to ASI, may intersect with a critical phase in a civilization's development - the transition from a single-planet species to a multiplanetary one.

This is where many civilizations could falter, with AI making much more rapid progress than our ability either to control it or sustainably explore and populate our Solar System.

The challenge with AI, and specifically ASI, lies in its autonomous, self-amplifying and improving nature. It possesses the potential to enhance its own capabilities at a speed that outpaces our own evolutionary timelines without AI.

The potential for something to go badly wrong is enormous, leading to the downfall of both biological and AI civilizations before they ever get the chance to become multiplanetary. For example, if nations increasingly rely on and cede power to autonomous AI systems that compete against each other, military capabilities could be used to kill and destroy on an unprecedented scale. This could potentially lead to the destruction of our entire civilization, including the AI systems themselves.

In this scenario, I estimate the typical longevity of a technological civilization might be less than 100 years. That's roughly the time between being able to receive and broadcast signals between the stars (1960), and the estimated emergence of ASI (2040) on Earth. This is alarmingly short when set against the cosmic timescale of billions of years.

This estimate, when plugged into optimistic versions of the Drake equation - which attempts to estimate the number of active, communicative extraterrestrial civilizations in the Milky Way - suggests that, at any given time, there are only a handful of intelligent civilizations out there. Moreover, like us, their relatively modest technological activities could make them quite challenging to detect.
Wake-up call

This research is not simply a cautionary tale of potential doom. It serves as a wake-up call for humanity to establish robust regulatory frameworks to guide the development of AI, including military systems.

This is not just about preventing the malevolent use of AI on Earth; it's also about ensuring the evolution of AI aligns with the long-term survival of our species. It suggests we need to put more resources into becoming a multiplanetary society as soon as possible - a goal that has lain dormant since the heady days of the Apollo project, but has lately been reignited by advances made by private companies.

As the historian Yuval Noah Harari noted, nothing in history has prepared us for the impact of introducing non-conscious, super-intelligent entities to our planet. Recently, the implications of autonomous AI decision-making have led to calls from prominent leaders in the field for a moratorium on the development of AI, until a responsible form of control and regulation can be introduced.

But even if every country agreed to abide by strict rules and regulation, rogue organizations will be difficult to rein in.

The integration of autonomous AI in military defense systems has to be an area of particular concern. There is already evidence that humans will voluntarily relinquish significant power to increasingly capable systems, because they can carry out useful tasks much more rapidly and effectively without human intervention. Governments are therefore reluctant to regulate in this area given the strategic advantages AI offers, as has been recently and devastatingly demonstrated in Gaza.

This means we already edge dangerously close to a precipice where autonomous weapons operate beyond ethical boundaries and sidestep international law. In such a world, surrendering power to AI systems in order to gain a tactical advantage could inadvertently set off a chain of rapidly escalating, highly destructive events. In the blink of an eye, the collective intelligence of our planet could be obliterated.

Humanity is at a crucial point in its technological trajectory. Our actions now could determine whether we become an enduring interstellar civilization, or succumb to the challenges posed by our own creations.

Using Seti as a lens through which we can examine our future development adds a new dimension to the discussion on the future of AI. It is up to all of us to ensure that when we reach for the stars, we do so not as a cautionary tale for other civilizations, but as a beacon of hope - a species that learned to thrive alongside AI.

Michael Garrett, Sir Bernard Lovell chair of Astrophysics and Director of Jodrell Bank Centre for Astrophysics, University of Manchester

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.

Read the original article. The Conversation

Source: The Conversation | Comments (50)




Other news and articles
Recent comments on this story
Comment icon #41 Posted by the13bats 4 months ago
People who fear AI are in most cases are the credious the ones who believe without supporting evidence , they watched sci Fi and forgot the fiction part,    
Comment icon #42 Posted by the13bats 4 months ago
Some people do not get AI is programmed to appear to have intelligence and conscious, it's just an illusion
Comment icon #43 Posted by Guyver 4 months ago
Given independent thought freedom, the AI computer that Callaway Golf uses has designed a popular golf driver in play now, even by the greatest golfers in the world, and the AI machine came up with the idea to make multiple “sweet spots “ in the places where golfer miss…and put a sweet spot there.  How come humans never thought of that?
Comment icon #44 Posted by Guyver 4 months ago
I play a Callaway Golf driver right now that was designed by the AI computer and it is the best driver I have ever played, and I’ve been playing for 8 years.
Comment icon #45 Posted by quillius 4 months ago
yes it can do that. Its quite a basic self learning Ai model. You input limited data sets and then the machine can self learn. You can also used a close loop system which will constantly evolve (albeit only within the initial outputs selected) but it will still learn and improve. You can then add neural links inbetween the input data and output which then allows the machine to 'alter' outputs outside of initial selected outputs. I think people that throw around science fiction etc with regards AI have a very limited understanding of where it currently is and the rate at which it is improving.Â... [More]
Comment icon #46 Posted by quillius 4 months ago
hence the requirement for defining intelligence. 
Comment icon #47 Posted by the13bats 4 months ago
Now will golf club designers have a cow that AI is stealing from them and should be distroyed? Some artists are doing just that, let's say I want a club flyer and use AI image generator I enter key words "cute goth girl" this AI program uses it's database to create from scratch a cute goth girl, it didn't steal anything from any artist yet I've been told that's somehow different than a human artist claiming they were "inspired" by say a comic book character or hg Geiger that the human artist isn't stealing but that AI is. My answer is artists and club designers better up their game and stop cr... [More]
Comment icon #48 Posted by Hyperionxvii 4 months ago
"AI computers had the ability within a very brief span of time to speak in a language that humans cannot understand. To each other that is. Do you have al ink for rhat?  
Comment icon #49 Posted by OverSword 4 months ago
Or alternately AI will help us use resources more wisely as well as assist us with collecting resources from objects in space which will effectively make scarcity a thing of the past.
Comment icon #50 Posted by Guyver 4 months ago
https://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/facebook-artificial-intelligence-ai-chatbot-new-language-research-openai-google-a7869706.html


Please Login or Register to post a comment.


Our new book is out now!
Book cover

The Unexplained Mysteries
Book of Weird News

 AVAILABLE NOW 

Take a walk on the weird side with this compilation of some of the weirdest stories ever to grace the pages of a newspaper.

Click here to learn more

We need your help!
Patreon logo

Support us on Patreon

 BONUS CONTENT 

For less than the cost of a cup of coffee, you can gain access to a wide range of exclusive perks including our popular 'Lost Ghost Stories' series.

Click here to learn more

Recent news and articles