works
Andrew Critch and Stuart Russell TASRA: a Taxonomy and Analysis of Societal-Scale Risks from AI article While several recent works have identified societal-scale and extinction-level risks to humanity arising from artificial intelligence, few have attempted an \textbackslashem exhaustive taxonomy\ of such risks. Many exhaustive taxonomies are possible, and some are useful – particularly if they reveal new risks or practical approaches to safety. This paper explores a taxonomy based on accountability: whose actions lead to the risk, are the actors unified, and are they deliberate? We also provide stories to illustrate how the various risk types could each play out, including risks arising from unanticipated interactions of many AI systems, as well as risks from deliberate misuse, for which combined technical and policy solutions are indicated.

TASRA: a Taxonomy and Analysis of Societal-Scale Risks from AI

Andrew Critch and Stuart Russell

TASRA: a Taxonomy and Analysis of Societal-Scale Risks from AI, no. arXiv:2306.06924 (cs), 2023

Abstract

While several recent works have identified societal-scale and extinction-level risks to humanity arising from artificial intelligence, few have attempted an \textbackslashem exhaustive taxonomy\ of such risks. Many exhaustive taxonomies are possible, and some are useful – particularly if they reveal new risks or practical approaches to safety. This paper explores a taxonomy based on accountability: whose actions lead to the risk, are the actors unified, and are they deliberate? We also provide stories to illustrate how the various risk types could each play out, including risks arising from unanticipated interactions of many AI systems, as well as risks from deliberate misuse, for which combined technical and policy solutions are indicated.