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Zero-JS Hypermedia Browser

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Generated: 09:43:21
Interesting read so far: "Economists estimate that the advent of the AGI worker could accelerate economic progress on the order of a new Industrial Revolution. If so, the humans in 2025 will look to the humans of 2100 like the humans of 1800 looked to the humans of 1975: impoverished, short-lived, disease-ridden, and worked to the bone. This Article argues that, today, law is standing in the way of that optimistic path. The root cause is, perhaps, surprising: When AGIs arrive, they will lack basic legal rights" nostr:nevent1qvzqqqqqqypzpkscaxrqqs8nhaynsahuz6c6jy4wtfhkl2x4zkwrmc4cyvaqmxz3qqsvkpufsxfgrgx2veypl8j2k4zew36mjccerm3nl574lfevjldj9tqdu0nuy
2025-07-22 19:30:02 from 1 relay(s) ↑ Parent 1 replies ↓
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Wild takes in this article: "Law already endows many other non-human agents–corporations, municipalities, states–with such powers. And it does so for the same sorts of reasons we advocate here. Not because such corporate or sovereign rights are morally required, but because they are instrumentally useful to human welfare. Likewise, we do not contend that AGI ownership is the moral equivalent of human slavery. Rather, we show, it is economically equivalent." nostr:nevent1qvzqqqqqqypzpkscaxrqqs8nhaynsahuz6c6jy4wtfhkl2x4zkwrmc4cyvaqmxz3qyt8wumn8ghj7cn9wehjumn0wd68yvfwvdhk6tcpremhxue69uhkummnw3ez6ur4vgh8wetvd3hhyer9wghxuet59uqzqacujr0lfl5l99z9g973fn26w7qev7tkpy0e6fejt3pd8l6yhl5xd4eeej
2025-07-22 19:39:52 from 1 relay(s) ↑ Parent Reply