If Anyone Builds It, Everyone Dies: Why Superhuman AI Would Kill Us All
Anno:
2025
Casa editrice:
Little, Brown & Company
Segnalato da
Carlo Mazzucchelli
Altri libri consigliati
da Carlo Mazzucchelli

If Anyone Builds It, Everyone Dies: Why Superhuman AI Would Kill Us All

"May prove to be the most important book of our time.”—Tim Urban, Wait But Why The scramble to create superhuman AI has put us on the path to extinction—but it’s not too late to change course, as two of the field’s earliest researchers explain in this clarion call for humanity. In 2023, hundreds of AI luminaries signed an open letter warning that artificial intelligence poses a serious risk of human extinction.

Since then, the AI race has only intensified. Companies and countries are rushing to build machines that will be smarter than any person. And the world is devastatingly unprepared for what would come next.

For decades, two signatories of that letter—Eliezer Yudkowsky and Nate Soares—have studied how smarter-than-human intelligences will think, behave, and pursue their objectives.

Their research says that sufficiently smart AIs will develop goals of their own that put them in conflict with us—and that if it comes to conflict, an artificial superintelligence would crush us. T

he contest wouldn’t even be close. How could a machine superintelligence wipe out our entire species? Why would it want to? Would it want anything at all? In this urgent book, Yudkowsky and Soares walk through the theory and the evidence, present one possible extinction scenario, and explain what it would take for humanity to survive.

The world is racing to build something truly new under the sun. And if anyone builds it, everyone dies.

“The best no-nonsense, simple explanation of the AI risk problem I've ever read.”—Yishan Wong, Former CEO of Reddit

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Convergenze inattese tra Yudkowsky/Soares e Sadin Un contributo di riflessione per mettere a confronto due diagnosi dei rischi associati all’evoluzione attuale dell’intelligenza artificiale che sembrano, a una prima lettura, irriducibili l'una all'altra: quella di Eliezer Yudkowsky e Nate Soares, sviluppata nel volume If Anyone Builds It, Everyone Dies (2025), e quella di Éric Sadin, elaborata in Le Désert de nous-mêmes (2025). Al di là delle differenze metodologiche e disciplinari, che sono reali e non vanno minimizzate, i due approcci sembrano converfere su tre nodi fondamentali: 1] la struttura dell'allarme come kairos negativo, 2] la critica della complicità passiva delle istituzioni e della comunità scientifica, 3] il riorientamento del problema dall'ambito tecnico a quello antropologico. Tale convergenza non è casuale, rivela la presenza di una preoccupazione di fondo condivisa riguardo alla capacità dell'umano di comprendere e governare ciò che produce.