Emberwatch

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

I've been thinking about this for a while, and would love to have other, more knowledgeable (hopefully!) opinions on this:

I've been dwelling on how we might be able to enforce some sort of set of rules or widely agreed upon "morals" on artificial general intelligence systems, which is something that should almost certainly be distributed in order a single entity from seizing control of it (governments, private individuals, corporations, or any AGI systems), and which would also allow a potentially growing set of rules or directives that couldn't be edited or controlled by a singular actor--at least in theory.

What other considerations would need to be made? Is this a plausibly good use of this technology?

[–] [email protected] 16 points 1 year ago

Shoutout to the homies at the Citizen's Climate Lobby, where you can take like 5 minutes to fill in a mostly pre-written message to your reps and tell them to fucking act on climate legislation. Dunno if it's cool to post links, but this just takes you to it with no hassle (also don't trust strangers' links on the internet; you can google "citizens climate lobby write congress" and get to the same destination):

https://cclusa.org/write

If you're doing nothing else about climate change, at least do this. You've got five fucking minutes to spare to help sound the alarm bell if you're browsing a comment section. Don't be a doomer who doesn't actually do anything, otherwise you're just ruining your own day for no reason.

[–] [email protected] 9 points 1 year ago

There's no objective test for determining if you're trans or not. To me, being trans is simply a label you can choose to subscribe to (or not). It comes with some expectations, sure, but you're not obligated to hold yourself to any of those expectations--at all, if you don't want to.

Perhaps a more useful way to think about it is: do you think you would be happier to be perceived and treated as a different gender? I started off with the "button test." If you could press a button, and it would instantly change your gender and appearance to match what you envision, would you press it? What if the button took a week to work instead? A month? And so on, until you reach the logical conclusion: What if it took several months to years, wouldn't necessarily make you look perfect, and potentially had the risk of some negative side effects (i.e., worked exactly like hormone therapy)?

I'd also stress the importance of finding a good affirming therapist who will accept you as you are, but also give you more tools and ways of thinking about it that you wouldn't necessarily have on your own. I think, looking back, there were lots of "bad" reasons I wanted to transition (and some fantastic ones!) but it took a lot of time and introspection to sort those out since I didn't have someone to help guide me--some of the bad reasons were why I paused transitioning just to have some time to figure things out.

Take things at your own pace, don't push yourself to do or be anything you don't want to. Wishing you luck on your journey, wherever it leads! :)