I found this a little frustrating. I liked the content of the talk, but I live in New Zealand, I have thoughts and opinions on this topic. I would like to think I offer a useful perspective. This post was how I found out that there are people in my vicinity talking about these issues in private.
I don't presume that I am important enough that it should be necessary to invite me to discussions with esteemed people, nor that my opinion is imported enough that everyone should hear it, but I would least like to know that such events are happening in my neighbourhood and who I can share ideas with.
This isn't really a criticism of this specific event or even topic, but the overall feeling that things in the world are being discussed in places where I and presumably many other people with valuable input in their individual domains have no voice. Maybe in this particular event it was just a group of individuals who wanted to learn more about the topic, on the other hand, maybe some of those people will end up drafting policy.
There's a small part of me that's just feeling like I'm not one of the cool kids. The greater and more rational concern isn't so much about me as a person but me as a data point. If I am interested in a field, have a viewpoint I'd like to share and yet remain unaware of opportunities to talk to others, how many others does this happen to? If these are conversations that are important to humanity, are they being discussed in a collection of non overlapping bubbles?
I think the fact that this was in New Zealand is kind of irrelevant anyway, given how easy it is to communicate globally. It just served to for the title capture my attention.
Assuming it's basically the same bunch of bunker billionaires who a few years back invited Douglas Rushkoff to give pointers on how to keep their security guards in check after SHTF. They've found their answer, now they just need to figure out how to control the superintelligence...
I don't presume that I am important enough that it should be necessary to invite me to discussions with esteemed people, nor that my opinion is imported enough that everyone should hear it, but I would least like to know that such events are happening in my neighbourhood and who I can share ideas with.
This isn't really a criticism of this specific event or even topic, but the overall feeling that things in the world are being discussed in places where I and presumably many other people with valuable input in their individual domains have no voice. Maybe in this particular event it was just a group of individuals who wanted to learn more about the topic, on the other hand, maybe some of those people will end up drafting policy.
There's a small part of me that's just feeling like I'm not one of the cool kids. The greater and more rational concern isn't so much about me as a person but me as a data point. If I am interested in a field, have a viewpoint I'd like to share and yet remain unaware of opportunities to talk to others, how many others does this happen to? If these are conversations that are important to humanity, are they being discussed in a collection of non overlapping bubbles?
I think the fact that this was in New Zealand is kind of irrelevant anyway, given how easy it is to communicate globally. It just served to for the title capture my attention.
(I hope, at least, that Simon or Jack attended)